Medications — the whole reason everyone is here.
Sometimes a pill has to be given exactly 12 hours apart, sometimes once every three days after a meal, sometimes for life at the same time every day. Medvedin keeps track of all of it, so you can just give the dose.
8 schedule types
Any routine — from “once a day” to “split doses every 4 hours.”
No need to figure out a schedule on your own: pick one of the presets and Medvedin lays out the doses across the day for you.
Once a day
One pill in the morning. The most common one.
Twice a day
Morning and evening, usually 12 hours apart.
Several times a day
Split doses: 3–4 times at even intervals.
Once a week
Bravecto, flea-and-tick meds — every 7 days.
Every 2 weeks
Vitamins and maintenance regimens.
Every N days
“Every 3 days,” “every 10 days” — just set N.
Once a month
Spot-on parasite treatments, hormonal meds.
Every N months
Every 3 / 6 / 12 months.
Accurate to the minute
When every minute counts — Medvedin remembers.
Some regimens are time-critical: an antibiotic exactly 12 hours apart, an anticonvulsant at the very same minute, insulin tied to mealtime. Medvedin sends a notification at the scheduled time so you never miss a dose.
- The notification arrives at the scheduled time and stays in “Today” until you mark the dose as given
- “Not time yet” — if it’s too early on the schedule, the “Give” button stays greyed out
- Actual time is logged: you may have given it at 9:32 instead of 9:30 — that gets saved
- Standard deviation across doses is calculated automatically: you can see how consistent you are
Dose
Per-dose amount, daily total, and units — flexible.
You can simply enter “1/4 pill per dose” — Medvedin won’t pester you for extra numbers. Or set “2 ml total per day, 0.5 ml per dose” — and the app tracks how much is left for the day.
- Any units: ml, mg, g, drops, pills, pieces, kg
- Fractional doses: 1/4, 0.15, 0.8 — write it however works for you
- Custom dose: if this time you gave 0.5 instead of 0.8 — enter what actually happened and it’s saved
- Food timing: before, after, with food, on an empty stomach — Medvedin factors it into the reminder
One tap
“Give” is one button. “Skip” and “Custom dose” are a long-press away.
A standard dose is one tap. If something’s changed, press and hold the “Give” button — a menu appears with “Skip” and “Custom dose.”
You tapped “Give” — the dose was logged at the current time. Another entry added to the history.
Musya didn’t finish her food and the vet said it was fine to skip. You held “Give,” chose “Skip” — and it counts as “missed” in the consistency stats.
The vet said 0.5 this time instead of 0.8 — you held “Give,” chose “Custom dose,” entered the number, and saved what actually happened.
Consistency
Not just “given or not,” but at a glance — over 30 / 90 days.
Each medication has its own page with a heatmap. Green cells — the day was fully covered, yellow — some of the doses, grey — no schedule that day, red — a miss. You can see patterns and the rough patches.
- Average dosing time and standard deviation — how reliably you hit it.
- Breakdown by person: who in the household gives it most often.
You can turn it off for a while.
The course is over but you’d hate to delete it — just turn it off. The medication moves to the archive while its history stays. Need it again? Turn it back on with one tap.
Jot down everything worth keeping handy.
“1 ml syringe in the kit,” “Store in the fridge,” “If nauseous, lower to 0.5.” Notes show on the medication page and in the editor.