IBS Safety Strategies for Living Alone
IBS flare-ups can be debilitating and dehydrating. A daily check-in ensures someone knows when a severe episode leaves you unable to care for yourself.
IBS affects 10-15% of the global population, and severe flare-ups causing debilitating pain, vomiting, and diarrhea can lead to dangerous dehydration and electrolyte imbalances for people living alone who cannot get to fluids or medical care.
The Challenge
Debilitating flare-ups with severe abdominal pain, diarrhea, and vomiting can leave you confined to the bathroom for hours, unable to eat, drink, or reach your phone
Prolonged episodes cause dangerous dehydration and electrolyte imbalances that can lead to fainting, heart palpitations, and confusion when there is no one to help
Anxiety about unpredictable episodes creates a cycle of stress that worsens symptoms and leads to social isolation, reducing your support network further
How I'm Alive Helps
A daily check-in ensures that when a severe flare-up leaves you incapacitated in the bathroom, your emergency contact is alerted and can check on you or send help
Tracking symptoms, food intake, and stress levels daily reveals trigger patterns that help you and your gastroenterologist reduce flare-up frequency
The simple check-in routine provides structure and a sense of security that can reduce the anxiety component of IBS, potentially decreasing symptom severity
Why IBS Flare-Ups Are Dangerous When Living Alone
Building an IBS Safety Plan for Solo Living
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Frequently Asked Questions
How can a check-in help during an IBS flare-up?
During a manageable flare, you can check in and add a note about your symptoms. During a severe flare that traps you in the bathroom unable to reach your phone, the missed check-in automatically alerts your emergency contact. Either way, someone knows what you are going through and can send help if needed.
Can tracking IBS symptoms daily really reduce flare-ups?
Yes. Research shows that detailed food and symptom diaries are one of the most effective tools for identifying IBS triggers. Many people discover patterns they never noticed, like symptoms appearing two days after eating a specific food, or flare-ups consistently following poor sleep. This data is also invaluable for your gastroenterologist.
What if I am embarrassed to tell my emergency contact about IBS?
You do not need to share detailed symptoms. Simply explain that you have a digestive condition that can occasionally cause severe episodes where you cannot reach your phone. Your emergency contact only needs to know that a missed check-in means they should call or visit. The app handles the medical details through your private notes.
My IBS is mostly managed with diet. Do I still need a safety check-in?
Dietary management reduces but rarely eliminates IBS flare-ups. Restaurant meals, travel, stress, and accidental trigger exposure can all cause unexpected episodes. The check-in is effortless on good days and provides a crucial safety net on the unpredictable bad days that even well-managed IBS still produces.
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