Test-Driving The Personal Medication Record

An earlier post, How To Create and Use A Personal Medication Record, noted that (1) everybody, regardless of age and health, needs an individual Personal Medication Record that includes at least basic information about current medications and is always available to that person and those treating him or her and (2) several choices of Personal Medication Records (PMR) are available. Today, the focus is on the means by which you can audition the formats for their utility to you.
In my research for these posts on the PMR, I discovered far too many offerings to provide viewers with even a representative sampling, let alone an exhaustive review. I also discovered, however, that there are a few telltale signals that provide valuable insight into the design of the PMR and its potential fit with the user.
To maintain accessibility to this essay, it occupies its own page within the AlignMap web site,1 where it can now be read at
Footnotes
- AlignMap is my professional web site and blog that focus on patient compliance, also known as adherence to treatment ~back~






















