Endometriosis App That Generates Doctor Reports (Free for iPhone)
EndoTracking is an endometriosis app for iPhone that automatically generates a doctor-ready PDF report from your tracked symptoms, pain scores, and cycle data — no manual writing required. You log your symptoms daily, and after 2–4 weeks the app compiles everything into a structured clinical summary your GP or specialist can read in under two minutes.
If you’ve ever left a doctor’s appointment feeling like you couldn’t explain what your life is actually like with endo, this is what changes that. The endometriosis app with doctor report feature means you stop relying on memory in a high-pressure 10-minute consultation, and start arriving with evidence.
Download EndoTracking free on the App Store
Why Having a Doctor Report Changes Your Appointment
Women with endometriosis see an average of 4–5 doctors over 7+ years before receiving a diagnosis (Endometriosis Foundation of America, 2023). That’s not primarily because endo is hard to identify — it’s because the symptom picture is difficult to communicate.
In a standard appointment, you’re asked: “How are you feeling? On a scale of 1 to 10, how bad is the pain?”
You try to average weeks of experience into a single answer. You forget to mention the bladder symptoms. You don’t think to bring up the fatigue because it doesn’t feel like a “pain symptom.” You can’t remember if the bad week was before or after your period. The appointment ends with a vague plan and no new information.
Here’s what changes with a structured doctor report:
Without data:
Doctor visit ends in vague conversation. You describe symptoms from memory, forget key details, and leave without a clear next step.
With the EndoTracking report:
You arrive with a 2-page PDF showing 3 months of symptom history, daily pain scores (0–10), cycle phase correlation, medication log, and flare pattern summary. Your doctor can see exactly when your pain peaks, which symptoms are most frequent, and whether your current medication is working.
That’s the difference between a consultation and a clinical conversation.
What the EndoTracking Doctor Report Includes
The EndoTracking PDF report is not a raw data dump. It’s a structured summary formatted for clinical use. Here’s exactly what it contains:
Report Sections
| Section | What It Shows |
|---|---|
| Daily Pain Scores | 0–10 pain chart over your selected date range (typically 1–3 months) |
| Symptom Frequency Heat Map | Which symptoms occurred on which days, coloured by severity |
| Cycle Phase Correlation | Symptoms mapped against menstrual, follicular, ovulatory, and luteal phases |
| Medication Log | Every medication logged, with dosage, timing, and self-rated effectiveness |
| Flare Pattern Summary | Identified clusters of high-severity days with date ranges |
| Trigger Summary | Dietary, activity, and stress factors correlated with high-symptom days |
Detailed Breakdown
Daily pain scores (0–10): Not a single global number, but per-symptom scoring for pelvic pain, bowel pain, fatigue, nausea, and more. Your doctor sees which symptom types are driving your worst days — not just “she said 7 out of 10.”
Symptom frequency heat map: A calendar-style view where every logged symptom appears as a block on the day it occurred, colour-coded by severity. At a glance, your doctor can see that bowel symptoms cluster around menstruation, or that fatigue is constant regardless of cycle phase. This is clinically significant information that oral reporting almost never captures.
Cycle phase correlation: This is where the report goes beyond anything a generic tracker provides. Every symptom is automatically tagged with the cycle phase it occurred in. The report shows whether your pain is primarily menstrual, whether you have significant ovulation pain, or whether you’re symptomatic across all phases — a key indicator of disease extent.
Medication log: If you’ve been prescribed hormonal treatment, pain management, or are trialling supplements, the report shows what you took, when, and how effective it was according to your own rating. If a treatment isn’t working, the data shows it plainly. If it’s helping, that’s documented too.
Flare pattern summary: The app identifies periods of 2+ consecutive high-severity days and labels them as flares, with dates. A specialist can see immediately how many flares occurred in a 3-month window, how long each lasted, and whether they’re becoming more or less frequent over time.
Trigger summary: If you’ve logged dietary intake, activity, or stress alongside symptoms, the report surfaces correlations. This section helps identify personal triggers that can inform lifestyle adjustments and — importantly — shows a doctor that you’ve been observing and tracking your own condition carefully.
How to Generate the Report in EndoTracking
The report generator is built into the app and requires no manual formatting. Here’s the process:
Step 1: Log your symptoms consistently for at least 2 weeks. The more data you have, the more useful the report. Daily logging for 4–8 weeks produces the clearest patterns. Use the symptom library to log pain, bowel and bladder symptoms, fatigue, nausea, dyspareunia, and any medications.
Step 2: Open the Reports tab in the app. Tap the report icon in the bottom navigation. You’ll see a summary of your tracking period and data completeness.
Step 3: Select your date range. You can generate a report for the last 30, 60, or 90 days. For a first specialist appointment, 60–90 days gives the most comprehensive picture. For a follow-up with a GP you see regularly, 30 days may be sufficient.
Step 4: Tap “Generate Report.” The app compiles your data into the structured PDF automatically. No editing required.
Step 5: Export and share. Save the PDF to Files, share via AirDrop, or email it directly to your doctor’s practice in advance of your appointment. Many endo patients send it to their GP’s inbox the day before so the doctor can review it before the consultation begins.
What to Do With the Report Before Your Appointment
Generating the report is step one. Using it effectively is step two.
Send it in advance if possible. Email your GP’s receptionist or practice manager and ask them to attach it to your notes before the appointment. A doctor who has already seen your data will use the appointment time very differently — asking targeted follow-up questions rather than starting from scratch.
Print a copy. Even if you’ve sent the digital version, bring a printed copy. Not every NHS or private practice has efficient document handling. Walking in with a physical summary ensures it’s in the room.
Annotate the worst period. Before your appointment, mark the worst flare on the report with a pen or sticky note. Doctors respond to specifics. “My worst period was this cluster in February — here’s what happened” is more effective than describing symptoms in general terms.
Prepare one clinical question. The report does the evidence work. Your job in the appointment is to ask the right question based on that evidence. For example: “You can see I had 4 flares in 12 weeks and the bowel symptoms are consistently luteal-phase — does that change the treatment options you’d consider?” A question like that moves a consultation forward in ways that a general symptom description cannot.
What Doctors Can Do With This Data
A structured endo symptom report changes what’s clinically possible in a short appointment.
GPs can make better referral decisions. If your report shows consistent bowel involvement, a GP is more likely to refer you to a specialist with colorectal interest alongside a gynaecologist. That referral specificity matters.
Gynaecologists can prioritise investigations. A pattern of right-sided pain, bloating, and bowel symptoms concentrated in the luteal phase points toward specific anatomy. A surgeon reviewing your report before a laparoscopy has a better map of what to look for.
Pain specialists can assess treatment response. If you’ve been on a hormonal treatment for 3 months and your pain scores haven’t changed, the report shows that flatly. This data makes it much harder for a consultation to end with “let’s continue the same treatment and see.”
Every specialist gets the same baseline. One of the most exhausting aspects of navigating endometriosis healthcare is retelling your history at every appointment. The report functions as a consistent clinical summary that travels with you — so each new doctor starts with facts, not a 15-minute verbal history.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the EndoTracking doctor report look like?
The EndoTracking PDF report is a 2-page structured clinical summary. It includes a pain score chart, symptom frequency heat map, cycle phase correlation table, medication log, flare pattern summary, and trigger notes. It’s formatted for quick clinical review — a doctor can extract the key picture in under two minutes.
How long do I need to track before generating a report?
You can generate a report after as little as 2 weeks of logging, but 4–8 weeks produces the most useful patterns. For a first specialist appointment, aim for at least 60 days of data. For a GP follow-up, 30 days is usually sufficient to show whether a treatment is working.
Is the doctor report feature free?
Yes. The PDF report generator in EndoTracking is free to use. There is no paywall on this feature. The entire core app — symptom tracker, pain body map, report generator, medication tracker — is free to download and use on iPhone.
Can I use this report with any doctor, not just a gynaecologist?
Yes. The report is designed to be readable by any clinician — GP, gynaecologist, colorectal surgeon, pain specialist, physiotherapist, or any other provider involved in your care. The structured format is clinical enough to be useful in specialist settings but clear enough for a GP to act on without specialist training.
What if I’ve only been tracking for a few days?
Start logging today and schedule your appointment 4–6 weeks out if possible. Even if you have an upcoming appointment soon, a 2-week report is better than no report. The app clearly labels the data period so your doctor understands the timeframe. Something is always better than nothing — and one month of consistent data from this point forward becomes the baseline for every future appointment.
Conclusion: Stop Explaining. Start Showing.
Every endo patient who has spent years trying to communicate their experience to doctors who have limited time and limited context knows the problem intimately: words aren’t enough. “It’s really bad” doesn’t convey a 7/10 pain on 18 out of 30 days. “It affects my whole life” doesn’t show that your worst flares last 5–6 days and cluster around ovulation. “The medication isn’t helping” lands differently when a chart proves it.
The EndoTracking doctor report turns your lived experience into clinical evidence. It doesn’t replace your voice in the room — it backs it up.
Download EndoTracking free on iPhone, start logging today, and walk into your next appointment with the data you deserve to have.
Download EndoTracking — Free on the App Store
Statistics sourced from: Endometriosis Foundation of America (endofound.org, 2023 diagnostic delay data).