I wonder how much usage of ColdFusion-Flash there is in Medical Imaging or
in Medicine?  In our last medical project we were using CF to front end SQL
Server databases to allow Radiologists to view and distribute patient files
so that Primary Care Physicians could review these with their patients in a
browser.  The back-end to all this were large SAN and WAN infrastructures
where Radiologists could do full interpretations of X-Ray, CT, MRI, Nuclear
Medicine and other patient images.  That was 4-5 years ago.  With the
current state of ColdFusion and Flash the opportunities for MM in medicine
are much greater. It is a huge market and still very fragmented, as one
doctor once said to me "There is no Microsoft of Medical Software!"

Kind Regards - Mike Brunt
Webapper Services LLC
Web Site http://www.webapper.com
Blog http://www.webapper.net

Webapper <Web Application Specialists>

-----Original Message-----
From: Candace Cottrell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, September 19, 2003 7:29 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: OT .Net? Java? No Thanks, We'll Take Macromedia Instead

We use PACS here...

Candace K. Cottrell, Web Developer
The Children's Medical Center
One Children's Plaza
Dayton, OH 45404
937-641-4293
http://www.childrensdayton.org


[EMAIL PROTECTED]

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 9/19/2003 1:45:11 AM >>>
Howard, how established is PACS or EMR with the doctors?  Just curious
because I spend several years in TeleRadiology/PACS.

Kind Regards - Mike Brunt
Webapper Services LLC
Web Site http://www.webapper.com
Blog http://www.webapper.net

Webapper <Web Application Specialists>

-----Original Message-----
From: Owens, Howard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2003 6:29 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: OT .Net? Java? No Thanks, We'll Take Macromedia Instead

One of my doctors is part of a very large group. Every member of the
medical
staff carries around a wireless "clipboard" .. it is really just a
laptop
designed to be held and used like a clipboard, or an 8x10 PDA.  The
entire
office is digital. No paper charts or records of any kind (except
archives).
It's a very cool set up. It's WindowsXP. Full internet access, too.

If medical staff wanted an application they could access from any
modern
computer, then Flash would make a good deal of sense.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Howard Owens
Internet Operations Cordinator
Ventura County Star / E.W. Scripps Co.
www.venturacountystar.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
AIM: GoCatGo1956
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Dave Carabetta [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2003 6:58 AM
> To:   CF-Talk
> Subject:      Re: OT .Net? Java? No Thanks, We'll Take Macromedia
Instead
>
>
>
> As a quick aside, I don't know if I see their product as being
overly
> successful in hospitals. It seems that their product is dependent on
> running
> in a browser. Most doctors (my brother and father being two of them)
carry
>
> around PDAs with their patient info, not cumbersome laptops. Unless
the UI
>
> was designed with PDAs and other handheld devices in mind (the
article
> doesn't mention that), it's a nice-sounding product, but not
terribly
> usable
> in the real world.
>
>



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