Medicine reminders

No morning dose gets lost in the rush

7 AM in most homes is tea, school bags, and someone shouting up the stairs — and somewhere in that noise, Appa's blood-pressure tablet waits to be remembered by whoever happens to notice. Nityaayu gives that job a quieter, more reliable owner, so the morning dose stops riding on one person's memory.

Amma · Today
Today's doses

The moment it helps

"For years I'd call Amma at 8:15 just to ask if she'd taken her tablet. Now I only call to talk — the dose already got marked done, and I can see it from Bangalore."

Son · Bengaluru · mother in Kanpur

What the reminder actually carries

More than an alarm. The whole context of a dose.

An alarm tells you it's time. This tells the right person what, how much, with food or without — and quietly notices when it's done.

The dose, with its instructions

Name, strength, timing, and the little notes that matter — before food, with water, not with milk — held next to the reminder, not in someone's head.

One tap to mark it done

No forms. A single confirm closes the loop, so the family can see the morning is handled without a phone call to check.

A gentle backup, not nagging

If a dose slips past its window, a chosen family member can be quietly told — help arrives before it becomes a worry.

The prescription stays attached

When a doctor changes something, the original note is right there to check against, so the routine updates from the source.

How it works

Set up once, in the time it takes to make chai.

STEP 01

Add the medicine

Type the name or snap the strip. Set the times of day it's taken — morning, noon, evening, night.

STEP 02

Choose who's reminded

The person taking it, a caregiver, or both. You decide who sees what, and who hears about a miss.

STEP 03

Let the mornings run themselves

Reminders arrive on time, doses get marked done, and the household stops carrying the weight of remembering.

What changes at home

The same medicines, a calmer routine.

Used to be

  • "Did Amma take her morning tablet?" — asked three times a day.
  • A missed dose noticed only at dinner, if at all.
  • Every change to the routine living in one person's memory.

Now

  • The dose reminds the right person and marks itself done.
  • A quiet heads-up the moment something is actually missed.
  • Timings and notes visible to everyone who helps.
Safety note: Nityaayu helps organise reminders and records. It does not decide medicines, change doses, diagnose, prescribe, or replace a doctor or pharmacist. Always confirm timings and changes with a qualified professional.

Common questions

What families ask first.

Who gets the reminder — my parent or me?

Whoever should. A dose can remind the person taking it and quietly let a chosen family member know if it's missed — so the load doesn't always fall on one person.

What if my parent isn't comfortable with apps?

Reminders are confirmed with a single tap, and you can set up and watch over the whole routine from your own phone.

Can more than one person help?

Yes. Siblings, a spouse, or a trusted helper can each see exactly the slice of the routine you choose to share.

Keep reading

Pages that pair well with this one.

Give the morning dose a reliable owner.

Set up one medicine in two minutes and bring the household into view.