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.

Open the calculator

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.

Open the patient handoff toolkit

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.

Read the EMR walkthrough article

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.

Browse the journal