For clinicians
Bladder Diaries is one half of a two-site workflow. Your patient logs the diary on myflowcheck.com; you analyze it here and read the result into your EMR. This page walks through the full loop.
How the two sites work together
Your patient captures 3 days of voids, drinks, and leakage on myflowcheck.com (free, no signup) and shares a PDF with you. You paste or import that PDF into Bladder Diaries, which returns an IPC Functional Diagnosis (ICS-aligned 4Is classification with 24hVV, NPi, and MVV) in under 2 minutes. The two sites are split deliberately: myflowcheck.com is the patient-facing capture surface; bladderdiaries.com is the clinician-facing analysis surface. Neither site stores patient data on a server.
Hand off myflowcheck.com to your patient
Getting myflowcheck.com into a patient's hands should take zero typing. The patient handoff toolkit gives you four ways to share the link in any of the 6 supported languages: a scannable QR code (for across-the-desk handoff), a copy-paste smart-phrase for your Epic SmartPhrase library or Cerner Auto Text, a pre-filled email draft (for telehealth and mail-out patients), and a one-page printable PDF handout. Each affordance is locale-aware: a French clinician downloads a French handout for their French patient.
Read the diary into your EMR
When you have the IPC Functional Diagnosis on screen, you can export it in three EMR-ready formats: a FHIR R4 Bundle (modern EMRs and SMART-on-FHIR pipelines), a C-CDA R2.1 CCD (legacy ingestion paths, Direct Secure Messaging via HISPs, Prompt-via-Kno2), or a localized PDF you can attach to a chart note. Every export is generated on your device; nothing is sent to a Bladder Diaries server. The clinician walkthrough article explains how each format reads into Epic, Cerner, and Prompt step-by-step.
Evidence-based articles in the journal
The journal carries long-form, citation-backed writing on bladder diaries, lower urinary tract symptoms, and pelvic health: how the ICS thresholds are derived, why a 3-day diary outperforms a 24-hour snapshot, how to interpret nocturnal polyuria index, how to talk to patients about diary findings. Every article is peer-reviewed and translated to all 6 site languages. Bookmark the journal as a continuing-education resource for your practice.
