Prescriber appointments are short. Most run 10 to 20 minutes, and the first half of that gets eaten by trying to summarise the previous three months from memory. The summary you give from memory is also the part of the appointment most likely to be wrong — the rough weeks blur together, the side-effect that stopped two months ago is hard to date, the question you wrote down on a sticky note isn't where you thought it was.
The fix is two minutes of preparation on the morning of the appointment. Open Titra, scroll to the 12-week summary view, take a single screenshot. Email it to yourself so it sits at the top of the inbox by the time you arrive.
In the appointment, open the screenshot on the phone and hand it across — or talk through it screen-up. Three things happen. One: the conversation starts at minute one of the appointment instead of minute eleven, which gives you the back half of the slot for actual questions instead of recap.
In the appointment, open the screenshot on the phone and hand it across — or talk through it screen-up.
Two: the data is accurate because it's what you wrote at the time, not what you remember now. Three: the prescriber has something to point at — most prescribers prefer reading a row of data to listening to a verbal summary, because pointing at a row is faster than asking follow-up questions. The screenshot also doubles as a record you can save in your own files for the appointment after this one.
Titra is designed so the weekly summary view condenses cleanly into a single screen — that's the screen worth screenshotting. Boring two-minute habit, ten times the appointment value.