Outcomes, Safety & Evidence-Informed Design

Built to align with how pain clinics measure recovery, safety, and patient trust — not just app engagement.

What We Measure

We capture structured patient-reported and safety data to support clinical visibility into recovery and risk.

01

Pain intensity (PEG / PROMIS-aligned):

Pain levels are tracked using standardized, clinically recognized assessment frameworks.

02

Functional improvement:

Changes in mobility and daily functioning are monitored to evaluate meaningful progress.

03

Recovery trajectory:

Symptom trends over time are reviewed to assess whether recovery is on an expected course.

04

Medication adherence & safety:

Medication use patterns are monitored to identify adherence gaps and potential safety concerns.

05

Triage event frequency:

The number and severity of triage alerts are tracked to understand intervention needs and clinical burden.

Detailed view of business reports with graphs during a corporate meeting.

Pain Score over 6 weeks

Why This Matters to Clinics

Scrabble tiles spelling 'They All Matter' on a soft pink background.

Earlier detection of recovery issues:

Structured monitoring helps identify concerning recovery patterns before they escalate.

Fewer late surprises:

Ongoing visibility into patient progress reduces unexpected complications or delayed reporting.

Better documentation:

Standardized data capture supports clearer clinical records and outcome tracking.

Stronger continuity of care:

Continuous recovery monitoring bridges the gap between in-clinic visits and follow-up care.

vs

Evidence-Informed, Not Experimental

CeaseMyPain is designed using:

Established pain assessment frameworks:

Recovery tracking aligns with widely accepted pain measurement tools used in clinical practice.

Medication safety best practices:

Medication monitoring follows recognized safety principles to reduce interaction and misuse risks.

Remote monitoring principles already used in chronic care:

The platform applies remote monitoring approaches commonly used in chronic disease management.

This is not experimental care — it is structured recovery support.
The program supports patient recovery between visits without replacing clinical judgment or treatment.

Lit bulb submerged in water, creating dramatic splash effect on black background.

Not Experimental

Explore how a small, no-cost pilot can generate these insights in your clinic.

Scroll to Top