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Tracking your cycle and daily symptoms in Red Tent helps you see premenstrual patterns over time—useful context for PMDD, not a diagnosis. This article explains why that logging matters, how Reports and phase context fit in, and how an exported PDF can support conversations with a healthcare provider.

Why cycle and symptom tracking matter for PMDD

  • Premenstrual timing — daily logs tied to calendar dates let you compare how you felt in the days before bleeding versus other parts of the cycle.
  • Severity over time — intensity scales and yes-or-no items build a record of how strong symptoms were on each day, not just whether they happened.
  • Cycle anchors — logged period starts define cycle boundaries so Reports can group symptoms by phase and cycle range.
  • Life factors — stress, sleep, and other daily factors logged beside symptoms add context when you review patterns in Reports.
  • Conversation support — structured history helps you describe experiences to a clinician; the app does not diagnose PMDD from your logs.
Pattern recognition in the app is based on what you log on your device—it is not medical advice, lab timing, or proof of PMDD.

Daily logs on Home — your building blocks

In the app

Open Red Tent PMDD to see the live screen walkthrough for this step.

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  • Symptoms and life factors save to one daily log per calendar date—the date header on Home sets which day you are editing.
  • Daily check-ins rows show up to three logged cards per type; fuller history lives in Reports.
  • Everything you save here feeds Overview charts, symptomatic days, and export PDF tables later.

Tap-by-tap logging from Home or the + menu is covered in Tracking symptoms for a day—not repeated here.

Optional structured path — PMDD Diagnosis Tracker

Separate from Daily check-ins rows, PMDD Diagnosis Tracker is a DSM-5-oriented guided check-in on Home with a fixed card deck and optional cycle progress toward a report.

  • Uses a read-only clinical card deck—not the customizable Daily Check-in deck.
  • Logs DSM-5 symptom groups, period flow, sleep, cravings, and impact questions when qualifying symptoms are present.
  • With Duration set to 3 Cycles, a cycle badge tracks progress; completion does not diagnose PMDD in the app.
  • Daily symptom and life-factor logs still feed Reports and PDF export whether or not you use this tracker.

Home panel behavior and carousel mechanics are in PMDD Diagnosis Tracker check-in—not repeated here.

Reports — patterns across cycles and phases

  • Overview — pick a cycle range to see averages, trends, phase breakdown, symptomatic days, and per-item history from your daily logs.
  • Phase breakdown — four rows (Menstrual, Follicular, Ovulatory, Luteal) summarize where in the cycle your logged data clusters; phase names are on-device estimates.
  • Symptomatic days — lists days that meet your logged symptom thresholds inside the selected range.
  • Custom Analysis — compare specific trackable items over a window you choose; those charts do not appear in the export PDF.

What each phase means in app copy is in the cycle phases article; Reports tab navigation and section detail are in Reports tab overview.

Export a PDF for provider conversations

When you have enough logged cycles, you can generate a PMDD Tracking PDF from Reports. It bundles cycle history, DRSP-style daily grids, and DSM-5 criterion heatmaps from your logs—a structured summary for a visit, not a diagnosis.

In the app

Open Red Tent PMDD to see the live screen walkthrough for this step.

Download the app
  • Built on your device from iCloud-synced logs—the PDF is not stored on Red Tent servers.
  • Includes a static DSM-5 criteria reference page and a mapping appendix that explain how app trackables relate to clinical framing—educational context, not your personal lab results.
  • Monthly DRSP and DSM-5 criterion pages show severity checkmarks from daily logs; empty cells mean no log that day.
  • Cover disclaimer and Important Disclaimer on the mapping appendix state the report is for healthcare conversations—not proof of PMDD or a substitute for professional judgment.

How to open Export Report, choose a cycle range, and share the file is in Export a PDF report; what each PDF page contains is in Understanding the report PDF.

🔒The exported PDF contains confidential health information—logged symptoms, severity checkmarks, and cycle dates on every table page. The file leaves your phone only when you pick a share-sheet destination (Mail, Files, AirDrop, a patient portal). Confirm who can open it before sending; leave Patient Name off during export for a less identifiable file. See Privacy and legal for broader data boundaries.

At your healthcare visit

  • Bring logs or the PDF as a structured summary of what you recorded—not as self-diagnosis or proof that you have PMDD.
  • Start with cycle history and when symptoms were strongest relative to bleeding—Reports phase context and PDF DRSP tables support that conversation.
  • Use DSM-5 criterion heatmap pages and the mapping appendix when your clinician asks how app symptoms align to clinical criteria.
  • Describe impact on work, relationships, and daily life from your logs; the app cannot assess impairment for you.
  • Follow your clinician's guidance for diagnosis and treatment—the app and its resources are not medical advice.
Sparse or recent logging produces thinner Reports and PDF pages—that is normal. Keep logging through at least two or three cycles before a visit when you can; consistency matters more than perfect days.
  • Daily logging how-to → Tracking symptoms for a day.
  • PMDD Diagnosis Tracker flow → PMDD Diagnosis Tracker check-in.
  • Export steps → Export a PDF report; PDF page guide → Understanding the report PDF.
  • Phase definitions → Cycle phases; Reports sections → Reports tab overview.
  • Medical disclaimer → Medical disclaimer.