
UI/UX Designer
Healthcare
4 weeks
A redesigned app and lots of learning
Overview👋
Sayacare is an online pharmacy that sells affordable, double-tested generic medicines. I genuinely liked the idea same quality but at way lower prices I studied the experience, ran a quick survey, and redesigned the friction points, this case study captures how the core flows were transformed for clarity and trust
One evening I needed to order a prescription medicine and discovered Sayacare. The brand promise felt trustworthy with big savings but the app experience didn’t match that. The home felt busy, the prescription steps were unclear, and the order flow made me second-guess the process. If an experience meant to reduce stress ends up adding more of it, that’s a problem. So I decided to dive deeper…
After my initial analysis these were the questions that kept popping in my mind.
(These later aligned strongly with actual user insights.)
Understanding the Users 🔍
What would make you trust an online pharmacy more?
Insights i got…
The Core Problem🎯

Lack of clarity
Users don’t know when prescriptions are required

Low awareness
Generic medicines poorly understood

Moderate trust
People hesitate due to safety concerns

Information overload
Visual noise cognitive fatigue in home, prescription and order flow.
Early Explorations
Before moving into structured flows and UI, I usually explore quick ideas on paper. These rough sketches helped me understand what needed simplifying, how users might move through the prescription flow, and how trust cues could be surfaced naturally.
Low Fidelity Explorations
User Flow & Structure
Iterations Iterations Iterations
Design Solutions🎨
Clarity Around Prescription Requirements
To remove confusion around prescriptions, I redesigned the flow to make the entire experience more transparent and predictable for users:
Added an RX tag on medicine cards
Redesigned the prescription upload flow
Making Order process Clear and Stress-Free
After fixing the prescription flow, the next big friction point was the order experience. Users on Sayacare had no real sense of where their order was. The original flow felt flat, text-heavy, and disconnected from the emotional side of buying medicines where clarity matters the most.
Clear order status labels along with Verified tags
Final prototype
What I Learned
1. Clarity beats flexibility.
Giving people three different upload options felt helpful, but in healthcare flows, “more choices” actually means “more confusion.” A single, focused path is almost always the safer and clearer route.
2. Users don’t read they react.
Most confusion around prescriptions wasn’t because users lacked intelligence, but because the interface didn’t guide them. The Rx tag + inline checklist worked way better than long instructions.
3. Don’t assume legality validate it.
I assumed medicine bills could work as prescriptions… until I reached out to Sayacare directly. That one message clarified the entire flow. Talking to real people saves hours of redesign.
4. Healthcare needs reassurance, not speed.
People aren’t just uploading a file; they need to feel safe. Small details like “Verified by Pharmacist,” upload success feedback, and a clear status timeline ended up making a huge difference.


















