Medicine is rigorously tested for safety and effectiveness before becoming available to the consumer. In the U.S., the FDA makes sure this happens. Once on the market, the FDA, along with the makers of the drug, continue to monitor the medicine for any unforeseen problems. Should an issue develop, or the safety of a medication come into question, a recall may be initiated. We should stop taking the recalled medicine at once. Not everyone is educated about drug recalls in the market. We are proposing a mobile application DrugWatch that will scan the medicine bottle and search the FDA database to determine if the scanned bottle is recalled drug or not. |
- Project Deliverables
- Architecture Flow Diagram
- Screenshots
- User Personas
- User Stories
- Features
- Future Enhancement
- Integrated Developer Tools
- License
- Team Members
[Presentation Slides] (Project Deliverables/Presentation Slides.pdf)
[Project Report] (Project Deliverables/Project Report.pdf)
[More Screenshots] (Project Deliverables/Screenshots/README.md)
- As a patient, I want to scan a drug bottle, so that I can know whether to consume it or not.
- As a doctor, I want to scan a drug bottle, so that I can know whether to prescribe it or not.
- As a pharmacist, I want to scan a drug bottle, so that I can know whether to sell that drug or not.
- Simple and user friendly
- Various Scan Options
- Camera
- Gallery
- Barcode (WIP)
- Few clicks to get Drug recall info
Pharmacy name can also be extracted from scanned label and contact information of the nearby pharmacy can be shown to user for getting further information on recalled drug or an alternative to that drug.
DrugWatch is released under the MIT License.
Nrupesh Patel |
Arpita Dixit |
Aditi Shetty |
Suraj Khurana |
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