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.

Pain Score over 6 weeks
Why This Matters to Clinics

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.

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.
