TL;DR

Health App Designs

How do you turn overwhelming health tasks into small, rewarding actions people actually enjoy doing every day?

That was the focus of my mobile UI work within Apace’s R&D team. I designed prototypes that transformed complexity into clarity: a visual search tool for muscle groups to drive fitness engagement, interactive micronutrient data to make nutrition exploration feel playful, and habit-tracking flows that turned routines into visible progress. Each interface was crafted to make healthy choices feel easier, more intuitive, and more motivating—day after day.

UX

User Centered Design

UI

Design & Development

An iPhone mockup displaying the youknoyou symptom tracking app with the headline "Track with one tap"
Myliftlog charts showing the number of sets per muscle group. Left mobile screen shows a heatmap of the human body while the right shows bar charts of each muscle group

Simplifying Lifting Insights

MyLiftLog - Redesign for progressive web application

Problem:
MyLiftLog is the "The simplest weightlifting logbook". However when it came to seeing lifting history, the 'simple' became complex. Raw lifting data
as a table was hard to scan and determine insights quickly.

Solution:
I redesigned the set history using a model of the body. At a glance it is easy to see which areas were being neglected, and which areas needed rest.

New Habits

Turning Complexity Into Curiousity

Do oranges actually have the most vitamin C? Can you eat only meat and have enough micronutrients?

To encourage these questions and exploration into micronutrients. I designed a data visualization of micronutrients in common foods.

The visual was interactive and sparked curiousity for followers of MPeytonCox who the visualization was designed for.

Shows a radial bar chart with micro nutrients around the center

YouKnoYou - Symptom Tracker

Background:

My wife and I were experiencing persistent, unexplained health symptoms. After multiple doctor visits and inconclusive test results, we decided to take matters into our own hands by tracking our diet and symptoms daily.

The Problem:

Traditional methods like spreadsheets were difficult to manage—especially on a mobile phone. We needed a simpler, more intuitive way to log and review our health data.

The Solution:

I designed the YouKnoYou mobile app to make tracking symptoms fast, easy, and visual. Users can quickly log events as they happen, and review their history in both a timeline and a heatmap view. This dual approach helps surface correlations—whether based on timing, patterns, or potential triggers—making it easier to spot what might be contributing to recurring symptoms.