Demy is Pfizer’s digital companion app for patients managing chronic migraines — built to offer more than just symptom tracking. I led the end-to-end product design, focusing on creating a seamless, empathetic experience that helps users take control of their condition while feeling understood and supported.
The Challenge:
Migraine sufferers often face cognitive fatigue, sensory sensitivity, and emotional stress — especially during episodes. Our initial goal was to create a sleek tracker, but user interviews revealed deeper needs: simplicity, speed, personalization, and emotional reassurance.
My Process:
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Conducted discovery interviews with migraine patients to uncover pain points beyond the clinical.
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Rapidly prototyped a conversational UI and AI-based tracking assistant.
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Ran moderated usability tests with patients to validate flow and functionality under real-world conditions.
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Collaborated cross-functionally with medical, engineering, and accessibility teams to ensure clinical safety and inclusive design.
Key Design Decisions:
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Replaced chatbot-style flow (which caused friction during attacks) with quick-entry symptom cards and one-tap logging.
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Introduced a dark mode and low-stim UI to accommodate light sensitivity.
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Designed AI-powered personas that provided personalized tips and encouragement based on user patterns.
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Added a progress timeline to help users visualize trends and feel a sense of control.
The Outcome:
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Increased daily symptom log completion by 32% after redesign
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Boosted retention over a 3-week period by 21%
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Featured internally at Pfizer as a benchmark for patient-centered digital health design
What I Learned:
Designing for health is about removing friction and amplifying empathy. Functionality matters — but in healthcare, timing, tone, and trust matter even more. Demy taught me how to balance medical utility with emotional design to support people when they’re at their most vulnerable.
