Sex-specific clinical ranges, light/dark modes, and custom app colors have been added to the Labr beta. Try them out now!

Labr v0.4.0 is now available on the web and Google Play!

You'll notice the profile screen allows selecting sex, now. This is because many clinical reference ranges are tailored to patients based on sex. Other physiological characteristics will be added over time, including age and pregnancy.

Light and dark modes have arrived (default is automatic), and you can even choose the app's color scheme! Adjust a base and select an accent to truly customize your experience.

I'm a broken record at this point, but I must say again: we're very close to a public release! Minor enhancements and bug fixes will highlight the updates between now and launch. There's also some built-in data that will be added, such as lab tests and units of measurement.

Your feedback has been essential to making Labr useful. I hope you'll keep it coming!

If you like Labr or find it useful, please support its development by telling your friends about it or leaving a review on the Android beta! Also, consider sending feedback to [email protected].

v0.4.0 Release Notes

All platforms

  • Added sex selector.
    Clinical reference ranges now adjust to the user's selected sex where applicable. The option is found in the profile screen.
  • Added light/dark modes.
    The option is found in the settings screen, and defaults to automatic.
  • Added app color selection.
    The app is now styled according to a base and an accent color, both of which can be customized from the settings screen.
  • Added color-coding of different lab tests within the same chart.
    Previously, all lab tests shown in a chart had the same color. This was always a temporary behavior caused by the unfinished state of Labr's ongoing development, and finally it's been replaced! Color-coding of charts will continue to evolve, but I'm uncertain if it will be revisited before public release.
  • The width of vertical axes of charts now appropriately resizes to comfortably contain its tick marks and labels.

I'm beyond eager to get Labr's first public release out the door, but there's a good deal of under-the-hood work that must be done first. As mentioned above, you can anticipate one or more 'boring' updates in the coming months as I handle edge cases, fill in missing data (e.g., eGFR is missing from the list of tests!), implement a few minor features, and handle a short list of bugs.

Stay healthy!