What to track (keep it lightweight)
A tracker is most useful when it’s fast. Focus on the few fields that make your timeline reliable.
- Date & time
- Medication (semaglutide, plus brand if relevant)
- Dose (as prescribed)
- Injection site (rotation pattern)
- 1 short note (sleep, appetite, nausea, travel, etc.)
A weekly reminder setup that survives real life
Practical tip: set a primary reminder and a backup reminder 12–24 hours later.
| Reminder | When | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Primary | Your usual injection day/time | Consistency + fewer missed weeks |
| Backup | 12–24 hours later | Travel, busy days, notification fatigue |
| Log prompt | Right after injecting | Avoid “I’ll log it later” drift |
Want an even simpler flow?
If your main problem is consistency, start with reminders. If your main problem is patterns (side effects, appetite changes, missed doses), add notes to build a timeline.
Common related intents
- Semaglutide missed dose tracker
- Semaglutide injection reminders
- GLP‑1 injection tracking guide
- GLP‑1 side effects guide
FAQ
- Is this only for a specific brand?
- No — semaglutide is the medication, and different people encounter it under different brand contexts. Jabbit is built for tracking workflows, not brand-specific dosing guidance.
- Does Jabbit tell me what dose to take?
- No. Jabbit is a tracker (log + reminders). For dose and timing decisions, follow your prescriber and the medication labeling.
- Can I track side effects over time?
- Yes — log symptoms and context (sleep, meals, stress). The goal is a clear timeline you can discuss with a clinician.