Severe allergies and anaphylaxis
Severe allergy medical alert IDs
For people with severe allergies, important information may need to be understood quickly: what the allergy is, whether an adrenaline autoinjector is carried, what medications are relevant and who should be contacted. A MyQRMed QR medical ID lets others scan your bracelet, necklace, dog tag, watch band ID or ID kit to view the allergy information you choose to share — no app needed.
- No app needed to scan
- No subscriptions
What your allergy QR profile can show
- Allergen list and severity notes
- Anaphylaxis or allergy action plan notes, if relevant
- Adrenaline autoinjector/EpiPen location notes chosen by you
- Medication and antihistamine information
- Other conditions or allergies
- Emergency contacts, parent, carer or support person
- GP, immunologist or treating team details
Why it matters
When allergy information needs more than a word
Fixed engraving can list an allergy, but it may not explain triggers, severity, medication notes, action plan details, emergency contacts or other health information. In a stressful situation, those details may be difficult to remember or communicate.
This page is for people who want a clearer way to carry allergy and anaphylaxis information across school, work, sport, travel, events, food settings, appointments and everyday community access.
How MyQRMed helps
Allergy details that can be updated anytime
A QR profile can hold more allergy context than engraving, including multiple allergens, severity notes, action plan details, medication information and emergency contacts.
If allergies, medication notes, school contacts or emergency contacts change, the profile can be updated online without replacing the medical alert bracelet, necklace, dog tag or ID kit.
Customer feedback
Setup was surprisingly easy and it works exactly as described. We tested it at the pharmacy and they could instantly see his meds and allergies.
Jeff D · Customer review
Questions
Frequently asked questions
Can MyQRMed show more than one allergy?
Yes. You can list multiple allergies and add notes about severity, triggers, medications and emergency contacts if you choose.
Can I include EpiPen or adrenaline autoinjector notes?
Yes. You can add information about an adrenaline autoinjector or EpiPen location and any allergy action plan notes you choose to share.
Is it useful for school, sport or travel?
It may be useful where allergy information needs to be available across different settings, including school, sport, travel, events and community activities.
Does MyQRMed replace emergency care?
No. In an emergency, call 000. MyQRMed helps display information you choose to share, but it does not replace emergency services or medical advice.
Next steps