Blue Buddy Reviews

Blue Buddy Reviews

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About: “Blue Buddy” is for people who are interested in eating disorders - New:
You can now fill your emotions in the food journal, associated or not to a
meal The App still contains: - Messages to educate and encourage the
sufferer - Information about health and quiz - Therapeutic strategies according
to difficulties experienced (bingeing episodes, restriction, vomiting) -
Cognitive behavioral strategies - Audio recording.


About Blue Buddy


What is Blue Buddy? Blue Buddy is an app designed for people who are interested in eating disorders. It offers various features to help users manage their eating habits and emotions associated with it. The app is designed by doctors, psychologists, nutritionists, and patients/users at the Specialist Centre for Eating Disorders in Paris, France. It has received the New Health prize "Therapeutic Education" at the Innovations In Health Challenge 2016.



       

Features


- Food journal with the option to fill in emotions associated with a meal

- Messages to educate and encourage the sufferer

- Information about health and quiz

- Therapeutic strategies according to difficulties experienced (bingeing episodes, restriction, vomiting)

- Cognitive behavioral strategies

- Audio recordings of breathing exercises, relaxation, and mindfulness

- Follow-up with a recapitulation of progress and goals

- Gathering and visualization of information in real-time (meals, binge episodes, restriction, body mass index, physical exercise, linked to current mood)

- Confidentiality of information, which can be sent to the clinician if the user wishes.



Overall User Satisfaction Rating


Positive experience
77.4%

Neutral
29.1%

Negative experience
22.6%

~ from Justuseapp.com NLP analysis of 50 combined software reviews.

Key Benefits of Blue Buddy

- The app provides a balanced approach to nutrition by showing the user how much protein, carbs, and fats they need in a day.

- The app provides a sense of accountability and support to the user, making them feel like they have someone looking out for them.

- The app has a comforting and cute design.




8 Blue Buddy Reviews

4.0 out of 5

By


10/10

I love this because when i struggled with an eating disorder. i think the reason i struggled was because of how i could control what i ate and everything was perfect. well now instead of counting calories BlueBuddy shows me balance, it shows me how much protein, carbs, and fats i need in a day. Does anyone know how to change the weight or height tho?


By


Triggering App

I have a few pointers. BTW: I went through ED recovery

1. There are only 5 questions to dictate if you have an ED. ED are complicated and very individualized.

2. BlueBuddy asks for your weight and then shows your BMI. I wasn’t able to enter mine because from treatment I’ve decided knowing my weight is too triggering. ED recovery is learning to listen to your body and mind and avoiding numbers.


By


My thoughts on this app

I love BlueBuddy makes me feel like I have someone making sure I’m doing well and pushing me to do better it’s there for me and it’s helping me.


By


Triggering

I just downloaded it. I like the set up. But the BMI chart section is very triggering. I feel like I need to change that number now and use my eating disorder more. Not helpful. Going to delete now because I will obsess over that for sure.


By


Triggering

BlueBuddy asks for weight and calculates BMI. After which will say where you are on that scale. Very triggering for people who deal with an eating disorder


By


first impression

so far, i like BlueBuddy. it’s comforting. maybe because i like cute things, but it’s comforting. wish there was a way to change my weight though


By


First Impression

To make it clear, all I’ve done is set up an account. However, I feel strongly enough about the beginning questions to evaluate if you have an ED to make a review.

There are five questions, and if you answer with less than two that fit their criteria for an ED, they tell you that you probably don’t have an ED. This is harmful - five questions don’t even cover the myriad of habits and feelings that can indicate even one common ED, like anorexia or bulimia. Another is the focus on being “thin” - there are at least two of those questions which are about weight. Yes, a lot of people with long term anorexia are scary thin - but not all of them. Not to mention, this is supposed to be for anorexia AND bulimia - bulimia is known to cause weight gain due to the constant fluctuations in food availability. Anorexia can too if the person is constantly battling the disordered behaviors and failing. Food insecurity can cause your body to cling to weight. Answering no to being too thin in these questions can lead to it saying you don’t have an ED - that’s dangerous. When you start evaluating people like that and saying “you probably don’t have an ED”, you’re risking turning them off treatment when they NEED it. Eating disorders can kill people - even someone who isn’t severely underweight. It’s SO dangerous the way they have phrased these questions, the lack of comprehensive questions, and the vague yes/no diagnosis at the end. Even the flippant message after you “fail” the test that you can still use BlueBuddy and it has good resources would be enough to potentially shame someone into not getting help because they think they’re making a big deal of it.

Another note, they include BMI in BlueBuddy , and ask for your height and weight. I decided to try BlueBuddy because apps like myfittnesspal use weight goals and track calories - numbers are a pretty common trigger for EDs, so I wanted to find an app that could identify problem behaviors by servings and habits rather than calories. Even the myfitnesspal message at the end of the day saying you can’t close your journal if you’re under 1200 calories can be enough to trigger my disordered thoughts and make me want to get that caloric number lower and lower and lower...apps specifically for eating disorders should avoid including things like this that are common triggers for EDs. That should be pretty obvious.

I was really wanting to give BlueBuddy a chance because of the food tracking system, but already it seems so bad. This seems like it was created by someone who didn’t bother to do any research on eating disorders and has just gone off the stereotypes of the scary skinny anorexic and the bulimic who frequently throws up and binges. Sorry if that’s not the case developer, but I think you really need to take a hard look at your app and see if it is helpful or harmful. Show it to a couple psychologists and doctors specializing in EDs and ask their opinions. Normally it doesn’t matter if an app doesn’t suit its purpose well, but when it’s regarding a medical situation that can be life and death, and seriously affects people’s lives, it shouldn’t be this poorly suited.


By


Dangerously bad

Triggering. BMI and Exchanges Focus.




Is Blue Buddy Safe?


Yes. Blue Buddy is very safe to use. This is based on our NLP (Natural language processing) analysis of over 50 User Reviews sourced from the Appstore and the appstore cumulative rating of 4.0/5 . Justuseapp Safety Score for Blue Buddy Is 77.4/100.


Is Blue Buddy Legit?


Yes. Blue Buddy is a totally legit app. This conclusion was arrived at by running over 50 Blue Buddy User Reviews through our NLP machine learning process to determine if users believe the app is legitimate or not. Based on this, Justuseapp Legitimacy Score for Blue Buddy Is 100/100..


Is Blue Buddy not working?


Blue Buddy works most of the time. If it is not working for you, we recommend you excersise some patience and retry later or Contact Support.



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