First star is for being able to set up, log in, and navigate the app. Some other reviewers were unable.
Second star is for having a convenient pocket reference of my food sensitivities.
The shortcomings:
At the bottom of the bar chart list, the “cont’d” sections (nuts, grains, additives) are empty so I don’t have a complete list of foods I have mild or no reactions to.
The meal plan is laughable, let alone useless. Other people’s criticisms of it (lack of flexibility, etc.) are the smallest problem. This is not a meal plan. Each meal suggestion is a randomly thrown together* list of non-reactive foods that in most cases don’t even comprise a palatable meal, let alone something that would satisfy even a low-level foodie. In many meal/snack entries, there’s no significant protein source. On others, the only protein source is dairy, so if you’re lactose intolerant this is also not useful. Lactose intolerance is not addressed by this test because it’s enzyme related, not IgG. That’s fine, but it would be nice if the app included a “no dairy” option for those who may find the meal plan otherwise usable.
The meals on my meal plan were all quite ridiculous, but here’s the winner: on Fridays, my breakfast is oat milk and roasted onions.
I’ll be making my own meal plans, obviously. And if they send me a hard copy of my reactive foods that includes the items missing from the app’s “cont’d” sections, keeping a pdf of that on my phone would be more useful than this app.
So while this app is a great idea, it needs a lot of work, and the meal plan shouldn’t be touted as a selling point until vast improvers have been made. Maybe for now you should call it “meal plan beta”.