Emergency Medical Information Card
Fill in a parent's allergies, medications, conditions, and who to call — then print a wallet card for a purse or wallet and a full sheet for the fridge or a go-bag.
This tool organizes the information you enter — it isn't medical advice. For anything about your parent's care, their care team's the right call.
Add a name or an allergy to preview the card.
Prints open your browser's print dialog — choose your printer or “Save as PDF.”
Private to this device — nothing is sent anywhere. It stays in this browser for you to reprint or update.
How this tool works
Emergency responders are trained to look for medical information on a wallet card or on the refrigerator. A short, current card — allergies, medications, conditions, blood type, and an emergency contact — can carry the essentials for your parent when you're not there to say them.
Everything you type stays in your own browser, on this device. There is no account and no server: the card is built on your screen and printed from your screen, and none of the information is ever sent to Sagebeam. Because it lives only on this device, print a copy so you always have it, and review the card whenever a medication or condition changes.
This is a fill-and-print utility, not clinical guidance. It doesn't decide what belongs on the card or interpret anything you enter — your parent's care team and their written instructions always take precedence.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an emergency medical information card?
It's a small card — wallet-sized or a full page — that lists the things a first responder or ER team needs fast: allergies, current medications, medical conditions, blood type, and who to call. EMS crews are trained to check a wallet or fridge for one, so keeping a current card in a predictable spot means the essentials travel with your parent even when you can't.
Is it really free? Do I need an account?
Yes, it's free, and no account is needed. You fill in the card and print it — that's the whole tool. Nothing is required, nothing is charged.
Where is my information stored? Is it private?
Everything you type stays in your own browser, on this device only. It is never sent to Sagebeam or anyone else — there's no server involved. That means it's private, but it also means it won't move to your other devices, and clearing your browser data will remove it. Print a copy so you always have it.
What should I put on an emergency card?
The most important fields are allergies and an emergency contact — those are what a responder looks for first. After that: current medications with doses, ongoing conditions, blood type if known, the primary doctor, and any note that matters (for example, where an advance directive is kept). Fill in what you know; the card prints whatever you have and skips the rest.
Where should I keep the printed card?
The wallet card is sized to tuck into a wallet or purse; the full sheet works well on the fridge or inside a go-bag. Many families keep both — one that travels with your parent and one that stays home where a visiting caregiver or EMS crew can find it. It's worth telling the people in your parent's circle where it lives.
How do I keep it up to date?
If you come back on the same device and browser, your card is still here — update a medication or contact and reprint. Because the card lives only on this device, it's a good habit to review it whenever a medication or condition changes so the printed copy stays accurate.
Is this medical advice?
No. This tool doesn't diagnose anything or tell you what to do — it only organizes the information you enter into a printable card. For anything about your parent's care or medications, their care team's the right call.