Interaction flags
Why this exists
Most tracking apps treat each medication or supplement as its own island. But if you take more than one thing, the combination is the reality your body actually experiences — and combinations are where overlaps hide. Because StaQ holds your full regimen in one record, it can surface places where two things you log are known to be discussed together in interaction literature.
What a flag means
A flag means: "these two items have a documented relationship worth knowing about." It does not mean something bad is happening, and the absence of a flag does not mean a combination is safe. Interaction databases are general-population references — they don't know your dose, your timing, your labs, or your history. Your pharmacist and prescriber do.
What to do with one
Bring it to the professional who manages that part of your care — your full regimen is already organized in StaQ, so the conversation starts from a complete record instead of memory. The most useful version of that conversation is specific: what you take, how much, when, and what you've noticed. That's exactly what your provider report is built to show.