EATING DISORDER MANAGEMENT FROM THE PRIVACY OF YOUR PHONE
Recovery Record reinvents pen and paper homework with a rewarding iPhone application that monitors daily behaviour and empowers users with a comprehensive, up-to-date record of their recovery progress. The Recovery Record hypothesis is that by doing this, we will increase motivation, monitoring and importantly, recovery.
As a Clinicians
You can access a broad range of accurate, real-time information from patients that has been aggregated to help you to identify behavioural trends and triggers. You can share information with patients, enabling them to gain personal insight. Because every patient is different, we’ve enabled you to tailor the content and intensity of homework to meet your patients’ unique needs. With Recovery Record you can provide more efficient, informed care.
Why make the switch?
With the antiquated pen-and-paper methodology, patients frequently do not complete their homework and become demotivated and embarrassed as a result. This perceived failure can lead patients to devalue and to dis-identify with their therapeutic activities, compromising the therapeutic alliance.
Recovery Record represents a superior alternative. It takes proven behaviour monitoring techniques and combines them with behaviour theory and game principals. The result is that associations are created between monitoring behaviour and a sense of control over ones environment and self-efficacy. Patients become ‘good’ and competent at homework completion, they develop increased context awareness and build the skills to change their own state.
Features
Track & Monitor
When you’re living with an eating disorder, tracking your dietary, cognitive and emotional habits is an unavoidable part of each day. Recovery Record equips patients with tools to make managing their disorder easier and more rewarding.
Organise
Bring patients' recovery record together in one place, so that it is available to you when you need it, and so that you can share it with your patient and members of their allied care team.
© Recovery Record Team 2012

