With this health portal app, you can access and manage your medical information, schedule appointments, and communicate with your care team. Includes medical history, lab results, prescription refills, and health data uploads.
AppRecs review analysis
AppRecs rating 4.3. Trustworthiness 79 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 23 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.
★★★★☆
4.3
AppRecs Rating
Ratings breakdown
5 star
77%
4 star
6%
3 star
4%
2 star
4%
1 star
8%
What to know
✓
Low review manipulation risk
23% review manipulation risk
✓
Credible reviews
79% trustworthiness score from analyzed reviews
✓
High user satisfaction
83% of sampled ratings are 4+ stars (4.4★ average)
About MyScripps
health information. This secure and convenient online health
portal has new benefits that empowers you to partner with
your Scripps care team to manage your health.
With our new and improved electronic health record, your
Scripps care team will be able to access and share your most
recent, up-to-date health information to better serve you.
you have more tools to access and
manage your care anytime, anywhere.
Take advantage of these benefits you have more tools to access and
manage your care anytime, anywhere. Take advantage of these benefits to schedule visits,
check-in for an appointment, video visits, communicate with your care team,
access your medical history, request prescription refills, view lab and test results, and upload health and fitness data, including data from the Apple Health app, when enrolled in self-tracking programs.
MyScripps Screenshots
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Reviews for MyScripps
caemler
Checking in for appointment
Checking in went mostly OK but for some reason it seems I didn’t “finish” but there were no more questions to answer.
Blsakatop
Comprehensive but too complex
I have been frustrated with this app for months. Not because of technical issues. Not because of missing information. But because the information organization is so complex. One example: The doctor told me I would be contacted to have the referred testing scheduled. I never heard from the scheduler and I did not know how to contact the lab myself. I later found that the scheduling phone number was in a Letter; I had been looking in Messages where the consult session was recorded. Another example: I could not find the number of a doctor‘s nurse, the contact I am supposed to use to reach the doctor’s office. While I knew the name of the nurse that sent it, a search for the name did not work (not “no result”; just nothing). I spent an hour and a half searching for the name (because the number was with it). I knew I had seen it in a communication. I looked in both Messages and Letters. Nor could I find it, for that matter, in undocumented text messages on my phone. I did finally find it. But why are Letters and Messages separate folders? Third example: Right now in my Visits folder, there is a referral for urinalysis. I do not recognize the name of the person who referred me for the test. And because my ongoing medical problems involve several doctors, I do not know if or how this relates to other testing and treatment. It’s good to have so much of my medical info available to me. But it seems to have been organized by medical professionals rather than lay users. I want to be able to access the info I KNOW is there (because I’ve seen it) in a less convoluted process.