Fe
VoidCode
Part of The Code Suite
A bowel and bladder wellness log · Launching 2027

Bowel and bladder, noticed.

A log that respects what you're doing: keeping a record of the two systems your pelvic floor coordinates. Three taps per entry, correlations that emerge over weeks, a one-page summary you can bring to your doctor.

No spam. One email when we open beta.

23
Time9:47 AM
TypeBowel
Bristol4 / 7
Urgency2 / 4
Why a log 01

Two systems. One floor.

Your bowel and bladder share the pelvic floor — the same muscles, the same nerves, the same coordination. When one isn't working, the other often follows. Yet most apps track only one, and most appointments only ask about one. VoidCode keeps both, because your clinician needs to see both.

Paper diaries fail. They're tedious to carry, easy to forget, awkward to fill in. Most go unfinished. VoidCode is built so you actually finish — and so the log is useful when you do.

3–7 days
Standard log length
Recommended by clinical guidelines. Long enough to see a pattern, short enough to finish.
Two systems
One pelvic floor
Bowel and bladder share the same muscles and nerves. Tracking them together reveals what tracking either alone can miss.
~5 seconds
Per entry
Three taps. Time, type, urgency. No measuring container, no volume math.
02 · What it tracks

What a bowel and bladder log should be. Built honestly.

01 · Log

Three taps. One entry.

Tap when something happens. Pick bladder or bowel. Time is set to now by default (change it if you're catching up later). Add urgency on a 1–4 scale. Note a leak if there was one. Five seconds, max.

  • One-tap toggle between bladder and bowel
  • Time-based logging — no volume, no measuring container
  • Urgency scale calibrated to clinical standards
  • Optional notes and trigger tags
02 · Bowel

Bowel-specific tracking, kept simple.

Bowel movements track differently from bladder voids — and your pelvic floor specialist needs the differences. Bristol stool scale, straining, sense of completeness, urgency to go. The full clinical picture, captured in three taps.

  • Bristol Stool Scale (1–7, the clinical standard)
  • Straining and sense-of-completion toggles
  • Urgency-to-go and pain tracking
  • Constipation and fecal incontinence aware
03 · Triggers

For when control slips.

Logging a leak — urinary or fecal — is one thing. Logging what was happening when it occurred is another. Tag triggers (sneeze, exercise, urgency, position change) and watch patterns emerge that you couldn't see in the moment.

  • One-tap leak logging — urinary or fecal
  • Pre-set trigger categories based on clinical standards
  • Custom triggers for what's specific to you
  • Weekly trigger summary in plain language
04 · Report

One page. For your clinician.

Generate a doctor-ready summary of both systems before your next visit. Voiding frequency, bowel pattern, Bristol distribution, leak triggers, nocturia count, time between voids. Formatted the way a urologist, gastroenterologist, gynecologist, or pelvic floor PT actually wants to read it — as a starting point, not a diagnosis.

  • One-page PDF, both systems on one timeline
  • Customizable period (3 days, 7 days, 30 days)
  • Export anytime — your data, your file
  • Shareable via email, AirDrop, or printed
03 · How it feels

A few seconds. A whole picture.

Home

Two big buttons. Today's bowel and bladder at a glance.

Patterns

Three observations per week. Plain language, no scores.

History

Eight weeks of both systems on one chart.

04 · Who built it

Built by a pelvic floor specialist.

VoidCode is built by Epic Media, a women's health software studio led by a Doctor of Physical Therapy with a sub-specialty in pelvic floor and nervous system work — the clinical field where bowel and bladder are read together every day.

This isn't a tracking app dressed up in clinical language. It's the tool the founder wanted her own patients to have — built so they'd actually finish the log, and so the log would actually be useful when they did.

Founder · Clinical lead
Doctor of Physical Therapy
Pelvic floor and nervous system sub-specialty. The clinician who reads these logs professionally.
Clinical advisor
Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Decades of practice. Reviews and signs off on every clinical module across the suite.
05 · Pricing

Free to log. Premium to share.

Track both systems for free, forever. Upgrade when you want the doctor-ready summaries, the trend view, and the full history.

Free
$0 / forever
Everything you need to keep the log.
  • Unlimited bowel and bladder logging
  • Bristol stool scale
  • Leak logging with triggers
  • 7 days of history
  • Daily summary
Join the waitlist

Common questions.

Don't see what you're looking for? Email hello@voidcode.app.

Does VoidCode diagnose anything?

No. VoidCode is a wellness app — a logging tool you use between or before appointments. It surfaces correlations and trends in your own data so you can have a more informed conversation with your doctor. Any diagnosis, prescription, or treatment plan belongs with a clinician. We just make sure you walk in with the data you'd otherwise be trying to remember from the top of your head.

Is VoidCode medical advice?

No. VoidCode is a tracking tool, not a diagnostic tool or medical device. It helps you keep the kind of record your clinician needs to interpret what's actually happening — and brings correlations to their attention. If you're experiencing severe symptoms, please contact your doctor directly.

Why track bowel and bladder together?

Because they share the pelvic floor. The same muscles and nerves control both, and dysfunction in one frequently shows up in the other. Tracking them in the same log reveals coordination patterns — like urinary urgency that clusters around bowel movements — that a single-system log would miss entirely.

Do you sell my data?

No. We don't sell user data. We don't share it with advertisers. Bowel and bladder data is intimate health data, and our business model is the subscription, not your records. The full privacy policy will be published at launch.

What conditions does this help with?

For the bladder: overactive bladder, stress and urge incontinence, urinary frequency, nocturia, interstitial cystitis, and the bladder changes that often accompany perimenopause. For the bowel: constipation, IBS, fecal incontinence, IBD symptom tracking, and post-partum or post-surgical bowel dysfunction. Pelvic floor PTs use both kinds of logs to evaluate treatment progress.

Do I need a measuring container or special equipment?

No. VoidCode tracks time, type, urgency, and Bristol scale — none of which require equipment. We deliberately do not require volume measurements because most people won't carry a measuring container, and a log you don't keep is useless.

When does it launch?

VoidCode is targeting 2027 for public launch, following a private beta. Join the waitlist and you'll be invited to the beta first, with founding-member pricing locked in.

Can I share my data with my doctor?

Yes. Premium users can generate a one-page PDF summary at any time — designed for clinicians to scan in under a minute. It can be emailed, AirDropped, or printed before an appointment.

Launching 2027

Two systems. One log.
Let's start there.

Join the waitlist for early beta access and founding-member pricing locked in for life.

No spam. One email when we open beta.