Schedule export — copy your treatment plan and share it in seconds
When someone asks "what medicines do you take and when?" — answering from memory is rarely complete. A missed name, a mixed-up time, a forgotten short-term therapy. The schedule export feature in mojApteczka lets you copy your full dosing plan to the clipboard and share it via SMS, WhatsApp, email, or any app — no login, no PDFs, no extra steps.
Why export your medicine schedule?
The dosing schedule is a key piece of information in many everyday situations. You do not always need a formal document — sometimes a simple text message with a clear summary is enough. Schedule export is especially useful when:
- a family member calls and asks which medicines you take and at what times,
- you need to quickly hand over the dosing plan to a caregiver who is filling in for a few days,
- you want to save a note with your current treatment scheme in the Notes app,
- you are preparing for an appointment and want the list handy, but a PDF report feels like overkill for the occasion,
- you manage a dependant's medicines through the caregiver role and need to pass the scheme to another carer.
Schedule export complements the PDF report — it does not replace it. The PDF is a formal document for the doctor's office; schedule export is for quick, everyday information sharing.
How does schedule export work?
The feature generates a formatted text containing the full dosing plan and copies it to the system clipboard. From there, you can paste it anywhere: an SMS, a WhatsApp chat, an email, a note, or even a document.
The process is straightforward:
- open the schedule export feature in the app,
- the system generates a formatted summary of all medicines with their schedules,
- the text is copied to the clipboard with one tap,
- paste it into any app and send.
The whole operation takes just a few seconds — from opening the feature to sending the message.
What does the exported schedule contain?
The export text is divided into three clear sections that help the reader quickly understand the full treatment picture:
Regular medicines
The first section lists medicines taken on a fixed schedule — with names, doses, and dosing times. This is the core of the daily plan, for example:
- Metformin 500 mg — 8:00, 20:00
- Amlodipine 5 mg — 8:00
- Vitamin D3 2000 IU — 12:00
Active course therapies
The second section covers medicines used as part of a time-limited therapy — for example, an antibiotic prescribed for 7 days or an anti-inflammatory for 14 days. Each therapy shows its percentage progress, such as:
- Amoxicillin 500 mg — 8:00, 14:00, 20:00 (day 4/7, 57%)
- Diclofenac 50 mg — 8:00, 20:00 (day 10/14, 71%)
This lets the reader immediately see how far along the therapy is and how many days remain.
Medicines without a schedule
The third section lists medicines in the kit that do not have a dosing schedule set — for example, as-needed medicines, supplements used occasionally, or products kept "just in case". This section gives a complete picture of the kit's contents, even if not everything is taken regularly.
Multi-language export
The schedule can be generated in different languages, which is useful when:
- you share the plan with someone who speaks a different language,
- you are abroad and need to show the treatment scheme to a local doctor,
- you care for someone who understands information better in their native language.
Schedule export vs. PDF report — when to use which?
Both features share medicine information, but they serve different purposes:
| | Schedule export | PDF report | | -------------------- | ------------------------------ | --------------------------------------------- | | Format | Text to clipboard | PDF document | | Use case | Quick sharing | Formal documentation | | Channel | SMS, WhatsApp, email, notes | Print, email attachment | | Detail level | Dosing plan + therapy progress | Full history + medicine details | | Preparation time | Seconds | Seconds, but more to read |
In practice, both features complement each other: schedule export for daily communication, PDF report for the doctor's visit.
Availability
The schedule export feature is currently available in the mobile app on iOS. Copying to clipboard and sharing via the system "Share" sheet lets you send the schedule through any installed app: SMS, WhatsApp, Messenger, email, Notes, and more.
How it connects with other features
Schedule export works best in combination with other mojApteczka features:
- Dosage reminders define the schedule that gets exported,
- PDF report for the doctor provides a more formal summary when text is not enough,
- Caregiver role lets you export a dependant's schedule and pass it to another carer,
- Shared family kit ensures the schedule includes medicines visible to all household members,
- Notes can hold extra instructions on how to take medicines, worth sharing alongside the schedule,
- Leaflets let you check medicine details before sharing the schedule.
Important limitation
Schedule export is a tool for quickly sharing a dosing plan. The formatted text makes communication easier, but it is not medical documentation and does not replace a doctor's or pharmacist's recommendations. The dosing plan should always be based on a specialist's guidance.
Important: the exported schedule is only as accurate as the data in your kit. Regularly update medicines, doses, and dosing times so that the shared information remains reliable.
The schedule export feature in mojApteczka is the fastest way to share a treatment plan. Copy, paste, send — and the other person immediately knows which medicines you take, at what time, and how far along each therapy is.
Download the iOS app and share your medication plan with one tap
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