Ok, Deep breath....... and a big sigh........... What I did ====== Simple (non torture) test ie attempted to put in new patient, add clinical notes etc.
Results: ==== Disaster Not saving basic demographic information properly Not saving the medical record properly etc etc etc. No, impossible to give specifics, too many things go wrong. I've said this before and I'll say it again. ======================= There is something fundamentally wrong with the way you are approaching the writing of gnuMed and the paradigm of medical records you are attempting to implement. Even given I disagree with your designs, there can be no excuse for the errors in this. I've said this time and time again - you should iron the bugs out of your data entry and saving. Even if they don't function well they should at least work. This program locks up time and time again and needs the Ctl_Alt_Backspace skull and crossbones to put it out of its misery. Adding clinical data dosn't 'stick' on many occasions - ie one puts it in and it dosn't appear back in the database to be displayed. I can hear Karsten/Sebastian once again saying 'put your money where your mouth is, be specific'. Karsten it is too overwhelmingly bad to be able to know where to start. I know all too well from my programming experience that given the way you are putting this together, it is near nigh impossible to give you descriptions of what I do to crash the program. You just have not covered the basic's of data entry to catch basic errors. I think your paradigm is wrong wrong wrong. I handed you a medical record design on a platter - complete with 10 years of functionality built into it and I still cannot for the life of me understand why you won't use it. You need a 'top down' approach, not a 'bottom up' 'bolt together' approach. Make the gui, make it function (with no data save), then add data entry and save per section and you eventually end up with a fully functional program. I personally don't think gnumed will ever get to a point of usability if you continue down the trail you are going at. People with abilities come/go, as they sense that contribution is pointless. I will make my offer to you again Karsten. If you want to stop in your tracks, adopt my functionality paradigm, and start putting things together bit by bit under my direction, I will re-join the effort. Regards, and contrary to what you may think, best wishes on your continued efffort. Richard PS (BTW if you are interested - take a look at http://www.intrahealth.co.nz/products_profile_demonstration.htm A highly successful NZ company who are supplying software in AU, Canada, Antarctica and NZ. I encountered this program during a software evaulation with Hunter Urban Divison did at the end of 2005/start 2006. Of interest is that their design paradigm and my own are uncannily similar, albeit theirs is quite messy. I've put a copy on my machine, and I think unfortunately for all the good features, their product is quite unusable in general practice. We panned their script writing. Of interest they are flying a systems analyst out here to Newcastle in July to spend the afternoon with Myself and a coleague in an attempt by them to fix that part of their product.) _______________________________________________ Gnumed-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumed-devel
