Blog

Tips, guides, and stories for family caregivers.

April 17, 2026 · Logger Clinical Team

A Guide to COPD Care at Home for Family Caregivers

Caring for someone with COPD at home requires close attention to breathing, symptoms, and daily changes. This guide helps caregivers understand what to track, how to stay organized, and how consistent monitoring can prevent complications and improve care.

April 16, 2026 · Logger Clinical Team

Dementia Care at Home: What Family Caregivers Need to Know

Caring for someone with dementia at home can be unpredictable and overwhelming. This guide helps family caregivers understand what to track, how to stay organized, and how consistent logging can improve care, safety, and communication with healthcare providers.

April 10, 2026 · Logger Clinical Team

Managing Diabetes at Home: A Caregiver's Guide to Tracking, Logging, and Staying Ahead

Caring for someone with diabetes at home can feel overwhelming, especially when blood sugar, medications, and daily routines are constantly changing. Learn what to track, why it matters, and how consistent logging can improve care, reduce stress, and help you communicate more effectively with your healthcare team.

April 9, 2026 · Logger Clinical Team

Hypertension Care at Home: Why Consistent Tracking Matters for Caregivers

Caring for someone with hypertension at home requires consistent tracking, coordination, and clear communication. This guide explains what caregivers should monitor, how to stay organized, and how tools like Logger help families manage blood pressure, medications, and symptoms in one shared place.

April 3, 2026 · Logger Technical Team

Privacy Matters: How Logger Keeps Your Data Safe

Logger protects your caregiving data with industry-standard encryption, strict access controls, and secure storage. Learn how your information stays private, why it is never sold, and what this means for you and your family.

April 2, 2026 · Logger Team

Caring for Loved Ones at Home, with Confidence and Clarity

Logger helps family caregivers stay organized and confident when caring for a loved one at home. By tracking medications, symptoms, and daily updates in one shared place, caregivers can reduce confusion, improve coordination, and make more informed decisions together.