Manage Chronic Conditions with Genetics-Informed Care
Track conditions, medications, and lab results with personalized genetic insights
Genetics can affect medication response, nutrient needs, and condition management. This workflow helps you track everything in one place and get personalized guidance based on your unique genetic profile.
Steps
- Set Up Your Health Profile with Wellness Coach: Go to Wellness Coach → Start new session. Add your condition: "I have hypothyroidism". Add current medications: "I take levothyroxine 50mcg daily". Coach adds records, checks for genetic interactions, and suggests tracking effectiveness.
- Upload Lab Results: Upload recent labs via Documents or drag into GeneChat. GeneChat analyzes: extracts values and dates, compares to reference ranges, links to your conditions, identifies trends, and offers to create lab result records.
- Get Personalized Recommendations: Ask GeneChat questions like: "How do my genetics affect my thyroid medication?" or "What supplements should I avoid with my current medications?" GeneChat reviews your genetics, conditions, medications, and labs to provide personalized insights.
- Track Progress with Wellness Coach: Schedule follow-up sessions. Regular check-ins: Coach asks "How has your energy been since starting the new medication?" You share updates. Coach adds notes to your treatment record and suggests adjustments.
- Prepare for Healthcare Provider Visits: Ask GeneChat: "Prepare a summary for my doctor appointment next week." It provides current conditions, medications, recent lab results with trends, genetic factors relevant to your care, and questions to discuss.
Example Conversation Flow
- [In Wellness Coach intake session]
- Coach: "What medications are you currently taking?"
- You: "I take Imitrex for my migraines"
- Coach: "Imitrex (sumatriptan) can be effective for migraine relief. How long have you been managing migraines?"
- You: "About 2 years"
- Coach: "Would you like me to add Imitrex to your treatments list and check for any genetic factors that might relate to migraine patterns?"