Support our efforts to improve the lives of individuals effected by Seizures and Epilepsy.
An English proverb tells us that necessity is the mother of invention. Inspiration for Seizure Tracker came from 3-year-old Evan Moss who was having multiple daily seizures. The system was implemented by persistent parents who desperately wanted to find answers through the data created by the electrical activity in Evan’s brain. In 2007, Rob and Lisa Moss created a basic web-based solution to monitor Evan’s seizures and at the urging of their son’s neurologist, they launched seizuretracker.com to the public. In the last decade, many new features and tools have been added to create the robust and comprehensive tool that Seizure Tracker is today. Evan Moss’ Seizure Tracker account was the first one created and continues to be the longest active account on the site.
Help bring more resources to the Seizure Tracker community Contribute Here!
Our most recent accomplishment...
Track your seizure by voice! The Amazon Alexa skill allows for voice interaction with Seizure Tracker. You now have the capability to tell Alexa when a seizure begins, when it ends and how many events have been recorded that day. Visit the Amazon Alexa skill page to learn more.
For more information about Seizure Tracker or the our future development plans, please feel free to email us at info@SeizureTracker.com.
If you already own a Amazon Alexa product, watch for the Seizure Tracker skill launch this fall. Otherwise, purchase your Alexa product so your ready for the upcoming launch.
Leverage the extensive features of SeizureTracker.com...
The Seizure Tracker website provides a huge list of tools to help manage epilepsy as a whole. While recording seizure activity is one of the most important aspects of managing epilepsy, collecting other treatment and lifestyle data help as well.