Byouki ga Wakaru bear iconByouki ga Wakaru
English Guides

Learn how to use the service and choose the right flow

These guides focus on how to use the current English version: symptom triage, condition learning, medicine checks, and Health Records.

Guides

4 guides

How to use the service and choose the right flow

Guides

English feature guides

All 4 guides

GuidesGetting started

Getting Started with Byouki ga Wakaru in the First 5 Minutes

A practical guide to entering symptoms, reading the output safely, and preparing information before care.

Byouki ga Wakaru is best used as a pre-visit organization tool. It helps you put symptoms into words, separate urgent signs from background details, and build a cleaner summary before contacting a clinic or emergency service.
Mar 20, 2026 Updated5 min read
1 references
GuidesInput styles

Chat vs. Structured Intake: Which Input Style Should You Use?

A guide to choosing between the conversational symptom flow and the structured intake form.

The chat flow is useful when you are still figuring out how to describe the problem. The structured intake form is better when you already know the main symptom, timeline, and red flags you want to submit in one pass.
Mar 20, 2026 Updated4 min read
1 references
GuidesMode selection

Which Mode Should I Use: Symptoms, Condition Learning, or Medicine Check?

A quick guide to choosing the right mode for triage, condition understanding, or medication questions.

The symptom mode is for sorting a live health problem. The condition mode is for understanding a disease you already know or suspect. The medicine mode is for questions about effects, side effects, interactions, or timing.
Mar 20, 2026 Updated4 min read
1 references
GuidesFeature guide

How to Use Health Records for Temperature, Blood Pressure, and Medication Notes

Learn how to record vitals and medication notes so they stay useful before and after care.

Health Records is most useful when it keeps both measurements and context together. Saving temperature, pulse, blood pressure, respiratory rate, SpO2, and medication notes in one place makes it easier to explain what changed and when.
Mar 20, 2026 Updated5 min read
1 references