Medical App
adhd management
class project, single person
1. preparation
For this persona and scenario, I wanted to come up with something that felt very real, like a story one may overhear from the next room over. From that premise I built Rebecca, an older woman caring for her granddaughter with ADHD that she doesn't quite understand. Because of this, I knew to keep both her and her granddaughter's best interests in mind when building the app, since they both will use it.




2. Ideation
After that, the next part was putting the pieces together. Since I'm looking at an older woman and a younger girl as my target audiences, I kept the text nice, big, and friendly, with plenty of free space to move around. The layout also goes with the friendly theme, rounded at the corners and soft at the edges. To avoid confusion, clear icons to each major page are always accessible at the bottom of the screen once inside the app.
I ended up with a lively and fun but comforting interface, welcoming to possible new users and friendly to retuning ones. There are only a select amount of pages as to not distract or overwhelm any user while still tending to the core issues that the app needs to tend to. Everything is legible but fits in with each other tidily. The text is large to be read easier by older eyes. Most options have descriptions instead of simple icons in order to be as upfront as possible.




3. Implementation
Lastly, it was just a matter of linking and elaborating on all of the things I had built. What colors would be best to use? What shapes? What icons? Is the direction clear enough? Will users be able to get what they need out of this app? WIll it fulfill their needs and expectations?
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I did my best to answer and meet these questions and more in the final!​​


The final version of the page you get on first open.

The final sign up page.

An exercise to help draw focus to the task at hand.

The final version of the page you get on first open.


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