Your symptoms just became your guides: introducing Health Concern pages and Focus mode
For months, Daili has been quietly learning what bothers you. Every headache, restless night, and 3pm energy crash you tap on a check-in becomes part of your picture. Today, that picture talks back: every concern you log is now clickable, and behind each one is a personal guide built around your own data.

A concern guide, opened straight from a check-in: your streak, your 8-week trend, and proof you're not alone.
From data point to game plan
Tracking tells you whatkeeps happening. It doesn't tell you why— or what to do about it. That gap is what the new guide pages close. There's now a dedicated page for every concern you can log in Daili, from headaches and brain fog to bloating, joint pain, and hot flashes — 23 guides covering the entire check-in taxonomy.
Each one is a practical primer, not a medical textbook: the most common everyday causes, evidence-based lifestyle fixes ranked by impact, what's genuinely new in the field, and — importantly — clear "see a professional if…" guidance, because a wellness app should know where wellness ends and medicine begins.
Tap "Headache" anywhere it appears, and instead of a statistic you get a playbook.
It starts with your data, not generic advice
Here's the part no article on the internet can do: every guide opens with you. Daili compares your check-in scores on days you logged the concern against days you didn't — and the differences are often striking.

Below that, an 8-week chart shows whether the concern is getting more or less frequent — and a quiet line tells you how common it was among members in your area this week. You're not alone turns out to be one of the most reassuring things data can say.
Habits that fight back
Advice only matters if it turns into action. Every guide maps its concern to the positive habits you already log on your daily check-in — and shows which ones are already in your routine versus which are worth adding.

This closes the loop that makes Daili work: notice → understand → act → track. You read the guide, add a habit, log it daily, and the same page shows the concern fading from your chart.
Woven through the whole app
The guides aren't hidden behind a menu. Anywhere a concern surfaces, it's now a doorway: the Top Health Concerns card on your Today page, the symptom chips on your daily summary and Timeline — tap any of them and you land on the guide with your data already loaded.

And because knowing who can help is half the battle, every guide recommends the wellness provider types with a real track record for that concern — massage therapy for tension headaches, dietitians for bloating, sleep centers for insomnia — each one linking straight into Wellness Near You, pre-filtered to providers of that type in your area.
Introducing Focus: pick one thing and beat it
Behavior change research is unambiguous: people who focus on one specific goal dramatically outperform people who try to fix everything at once. So every guide now has a "Make this my focus" button.
Pin a concern, and it follows you. Your Today page gets a focus card that tracks your progress — including a streak counter that celebrates every run of clear check-ins.

Streaks work in reverse here. Most apps celebrate doing something daily. Focus celebrates the days a concern doesn'tshow up — because that's the whole point.
Wella is watching your focus too
Your focus isn't just a card — it's wired into Wella, your AI wellness advisor. Her weekly report now tracks your focus concern week over week, and she addresses it personally in her reflection: acknowledging progress when the trend improves, gently redirecting when it doesn't.

And when you want to go deeper, every guide ends with a "Talk it through with Wella" button that opens a chat already primed with your concern — she knows your check-ins, so the conversation starts from your patterns, not from zero.

Try it today
If you're already checking in, your guides are waiting — open Insights and tap anything under Top Health Concerns. If you're new, it takes about a week of 30-second check-ins before your first patterns appear. Either way, the loop is the same: log how you feel, learn what drives it, focus on one thing, and let Daili show you it working.
As always: Daili is a wellness tracking platform, not a medical service. The guides are wellness education, and every one of them includes clear guidance on when a symptom deserves professional care.