My dad has had high blood pressure for over 10 years, and taking medicine every morning is a matter of a scheduled alarm reminder.
That day was a hot, rainy day in June when I suddenly received a call from him at work:
“I just took my medicine, but I'm still feeling very dizzy, and the back of my head feels like it's going to burst.”
I told him to sit down immediately, rest, and not move.
And I quickly asked my mom to prepare the blood pressure monitor to measure the values. The result:
Blood pressure 179/113, the medication had no effect at all.
I was really panicking at that time.
This is not a disease that can be delayed; once it spikes, a brain hemorrhage or stroke can happen at any time.
🧩02|At that moment, I remembered the reminder CAILA sent this morning.
A few days ago, I just registered a Marco ID on CAILA and linked my dad's permanent address (a city in northern Jiangsu).
The original intention was to check atmospheric pressure and weather impact since he is older and particularly sensitive to weather.
And this morning at 6:48, I received its push notification:
“⚠️ Current area humidity is at 91%, and the temperature difference between the surface and ambient is over 10℃.
Medications are prone to moisture absorption and deterioration, especially those requiring refrigeration and sustained-release medications.
It is recommended to check the medication storage status; if it's close to expiration, use with caution.
At that moment, I didn't think much; I just felt 'wouldn't it be fine to put it in the fridge at home?'.
By noon, when I checked the packaging of my dad's medicine, I found it had already 'swelled due to moisture'!
It's not that my dad forgot to take his medicine, nor is it a dosing issue.
It's just that— that pill has already lost its efficacy in high humidity and fluctuating atmospheric pressure.
🧠03|All pharmaceutical companies failed to remind, only on-chain AI said 'This medication should not be taken'.
I don't blame the medication instructions for not mentioning this.
It indeed states 'Keep away from light and moisture'.
But no one tells you that in extreme weather, the very concept of 'medication storage' changes.
• Pharmacies won't send reminders.
• Pharmaceutical companies don't send text messages.
• The medical insurance app only cares whether you have purchased it and whether you have claimed reimbursement.
• Doctors won't remind you daily that the medication may have issues.
But CAILA said:
“Today's weather conditions may affect medication efficacy.”
It's not a suggestion, not an advertisement, it's a reminder—don't let the medication harm people.
🔍04|How does CAILA manage to do this?
This is not a large model 'expressing emotions'; this is on-chain AI protecting real lives.
My dad was safe; we urgently replaced his medication and took him to the hospital for observation to stabilize him.
My mom is still complaining to me:
“How did you know it was the medication's problem?”
I didn't answer her because I knew:
It's not that I knew; it's that CAILA knew, and then I believed it.
Have you ever had anxious moments with family members who took medicine but 'still didn't get better'?
Would you be willing to let an AI system tell you in real-time, 'Don't take this medication today'?
Would you like the pharmaceutical companies to send such system reminders before advertising?
👇 Feel free to leave a comment about the moments when you felt the most helpless yet needed reminders while caring for your parents.#CAILA链上AI气象官捕捉下一场Web3风暴