A Scan It Up Medical QR tag worn on your wrist, ID, or keychain gives first responders instant access to your blood type, allergies, medications, and emergency contacts — even if you're unconscious or unable to speak.
A one-time setup that could be the difference between confusion and correct emergency care.
Enter blood type, allergies, chronic conditions, current medications, and emergency contact numbers in your secure profile.
Receive a durable wristband QR, keychain tag, or wallet card — all weather-resistant and clearly marked as a Medical ID.
Keep the tag on your wrist, in your wallet, on your keychain, or attached to your school or office ID — always accessible.
First responders, doctors, or bystanders scan the QR → your complete medical profile appears instantly on their phone.
In an emergency, every second counts. Make sure responders have the information they need before the ambulance arrives.
Wrong blood type in a transfusion is fatal. Your blood group is the first thing emergency doctors need — have it ready in one scan.
Penicillin allergy? Latex sensitivity? Drug contraindications? Doctors can avoid dangerous medications before treating you.
Interactions between emergency drugs and your existing prescriptions are a major risk. Our profile lists all current medications clearly.
When someone scans your medical tag, your listed emergency contacts receive an alert — so family is informed while you receive care.
Unlike phone lock screen medical IDs, our physical QR tag works without needing your device. Accessible to any rescuer, any time.
Start a new medication? New allergy discovered? Update your medical profile from your phone — the QR tag reflects changes instantly.
A diabetic person collapses in a public place. A bystander scans their wrist tag → condition, insulin info, and emergency contact appear immediately, enabling fast correct treatment.
An unconscious accident victim arrives at a hospital with no ID. Paramedics scan the keychain QR → blood type, allergies, and next-of-kin number appear in seconds. Care begins correctly.
Someone has an anaphylactic episode at a restaurant. Their tag shows they carry an EpiPen and are allergic to peanuts — a bystander retrieves the pen from their bag immediately.
During a seizure, the person cannot communicate. Their Scan It Up tag tells responders it's epilepsy, lists their anticonvulsant medication, and their neurologist's number — avoiding unnecessary intervention.
A patient brought in unconsciously for emergency surgery has a tag listing previous surgeries, blood thinners, and implants (pacemaker, pins) — critical for anaesthesia and procedure decisions.
An elderly person with hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease falls at a park. All their conditions, medications, and doctor's contact appear instantly — care is specific and safe from the first moment.
A clean, fast, life-saving medical data page — no login, no download, no delay.
Any phone camera scans the physical QR wristband or card. The medical profile loads in under 3 seconds — in the responder's language.
Blood type, allergies, conditions, medications, implants, and doctor contacts — all displayed clearly in a structured, doctor-friendly format.
Your listed emergency contacts receive an automatic Scan It Up alert with location — so family can reach the hospital without waiting for a police call.
Blood group is shown in large, bold text at the top of the scan page — the single most critical piece of emergency information.
List medications with dosage, frequency, and prescribing doctor — helping ER staff avoid dangerous drug interactions.
The profile auto-translates to Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Marathi, and English — readable by any responder across India.
Change a medication, add a new condition, or update your doctor's number online — the physical QR tag reflects updates immediately.
Medical QR is available as a silicone wristband, stainless steel keychain, wallet card, or adhesive sticker for any ID.
The QR page is publicly accessible to any responder — no account, no login, no app. Emergency info should never be gated.
As an ER doctor, I've started recommending Scan It Up medical tags to all my patients with chronic conditions. In three cases this year alone, the tags gave us critical info in minutes that would have taken hours to source otherwise.
I'm diabetic and travel alone frequently. My Scan It Up medical wristband has saved me twice — once when I had a hypoglycaemic episode at a railway station and a stranger scanned it to find out I needed sugar, not emergency services.
My father had a heart attack while driving. The paramedics scanned his Scan It Up keychain tag before he reached the hospital — they already knew his blood type, heart medications, and cardiologist's number when he arrived. It made a real difference.