GLP-1 injection tracker
A clear injection history can help you stay organized and prepare for healthcare conversations. BioMNTR supports logging injections, symptoms, notes, reminders, and labs.
Source links checked June 16, 2026.
What to log
- Medication name as written on your prescription
- Injection date and time
- Injection site
- Dose copied from your clinician's plan or prescription label
- Symptoms and wellness notes
- Labs, biomarker history, and appointment questions
What tracking should not do
A tracker should not prescribe medication, calculate clinical dosing, diagnose side effects, or replace a licensed healthcare provider.
Use tracking as an organization layer. Use your clinician, pharmacist, medication guide, and prescription label for medical decisions.
How this helps appointments
A dated history can help you answer practical questions: when injections happened, whether doses were missed, when symptoms started, and what you want to ask next.
References
- MedlinePlus: Semaglutide InjectionU.S. National Library of Medicine
- MedlinePlus: Tirzepatide InjectionU.S. National Library of Medicine
- FDA's Concerns with Unapproved GLP-1 Drugs Used for Weight LossU.S. Food and Drug Administration
Related guides
Missed a GLP-1 dose?
Learn what factors matter after a missed GLP-1 injection, when to check your medication instructions, and what to discuss with your healthcare provider.
GLP-1 nausea
Learn how to describe GLP-1 nausea patterns, what information can help your provider, and when symptoms should not be ignored.
GLP-1 dosing and titration
Understand why GLP-1 doses may change over time, why medication-specific instructions matter, and what to track during titration.