Research supports routine symptom measurement as a way to improve recognition and adjustment in mental health care.
Assessments give you a more structured way to check in with yourself. Use private scales and prompts to understand symptoms, stress, routines, and progress over time.
A single bad day can distort the story. Assessments give people the same questions over time, so they can see whether symptoms, stress, and functioning are improving, worsening, or staying flat.
Research supports routine symptom measurement as a way to improve recognition and adjustment in mental health care.
Repeating the same check-in makes change easier to interpret than scattered impressions.
Structured results can help users explain patterns to a therapist, coach, or clinician if they choose.
Use consistent questions so changes are easier to see.
Connect assessment results with mood, habits, journaling, and care routines.
Keep a personal history of how you were doing at different points in time.
Bring structured notes to therapy, coaching, or care conversations if you choose.
Select the assessment or category you want to understand, such as mood, symptoms, stress, routines, or a provider-assigned check-in.
Consistent questions and scales make it easier to compare this week with last week instead of relying on memory.
The result is not a diagnosis. It is a private snapshot you can compare with habits, mood, journaling, goals, or a care conversation.
Assessments give you a more structured way to check in with yourself. Use private scales and prompts to understand symptoms, stress, routines, and progress over time.
No. They are self-check-ins and do not provide a diagnosis. Talk to a qualified professional for clinical assessment.
Repeating the same check-in can help you notice whether patterns are improving, worsening, or staying the same.
You can choose to use your notes in care conversations, but the tool is designed as a private self-tracking space.