Diabetes is something you can read about anywhere. It feels different when it concerns your own family.
For me, it started with my Family
When the Ritual testnet launched, I wanted to build something with it that had a real use case behind it. So I started working on DiaRoutine: a Telegram bot diabetes diary for my mom.
She had tried popular diabetes apps before, but never got used to them. Too many screens, too many buttons, too much friction. Telegram was easier. She could just write what happened during the day, and the bot would structure the entry.
At first, it was a small idea.
Then I showed the bot to someone close to me who has type 1 diabetes. I watched what confused him, what helped, and what was missing.
I also spoke with an endocrinologist at the hospital. He explained that statistics over roughly three months can be important for tuning coefficients and understanding dosage patterns. The problem is that many people do not collect enough data. Sometimes it is laziness. Sometimes it is limited access to apps, paid subscriptions, sanctions, or tracking only part of the picture.
That changed how I looked at the product.
DiaRoutine is now built to help people collect a fuller diabetes diary with less friction. It can track:
- glucose
- food and nutrition
- insulin
- activity
- boluses, coefficients, and basal profile
- daily and weekly reports
- doctor-ready exports
- reminders from the agent
- pattern observations
- Ritual proofs for diary entries, reports, and exports
- Raw medical data does not go onchain.
@ritualnet is used as a proof layer and an agent layer. The bot can save hashes and proofs for daily diaries, reports, exports, or individual entries. Glucose, food, insulin, activity, notes, and Telegram ID stay private.
The bot also has an AI agent connected to Ritual.
It can remind the user to log glucose, follow up after food or activity, prepare a daily overview, and suggest saving a proof in Ritual. It does not give medical advice, change dosages, or send anything to Ritual without confirmation.
That is what I find interesting about Ritual here. It is not about putting private medical data onchain. It is about giving an agent a verifiable layer for actions and proofs, while the sensitive data stays private.
The user does not need a wallet either. A service wallet pays for gas, so the experience stays simple.
DiaRoutine is still in alpha. There are bugs, rough edges, and many things to improve.
But the first feedback from people using it has been positive. That matters to me because this was never just a technical experiment. It came from a real family need.
Big thanks to @meison_mswen for helping with development and pushing this forward with me.
We will keep improving DiaRoutine, testing it with real users, and listening to people who live with diabetes every day.
It is still early. But it already feels useful.
try @DiaRoutine_Bot in TELEGRAM
#BUILDONRITUAL