On Wednesday 21 June 2006 03:20, Syan Tan wrote: > occasionally you need to see what's happening to a patient who you have > only seen once or twice for , so you don't remember their name, but you > remember their age, and the condition you saw them for , and you know they > were seen about x days ago, and they are in the appointments history. You > could specifically search for them if you have an easily searchable emr > system, using something like a query by example, ( it might be difficult to > expect users to search using SQL), but a convenient way to find them is to > browse back on the appointment books, and see their age and the diagnosis > they were seen for , in order to find them.
I fully agree. Thanks for elaborating. > > > > On Wed Jun 21 2:21 , Sebastian Hilbert sent: > > On Wednesday 21 June 2006 02:09, Syan Tan wrote: > > appointments that have been seen should be viewable with the age of the > > patient and the decided diagnosis , in order for backtracking and > > followup in the appointments columns. this is in addition to actively > > marking the patient for followup during the consultation because > > sometimes you think back, and wonder why the patient wasn't marked for > > follow up. > > What do you mean by 'appointments that have been seen' ? Some sort of > nightly 'patient seen list' > > I can follow you that sometimes we wonder why patient wasn't scheduled for > follow up. But how do we detect those. Only when the patient comes in > without an appointment instead of a follow up appointment. > > How does the decided daignosis and age of the patient aid you in > understanding why the patient hasn't been marked for follow up ? > > Just curious about the context you see this in. > > -- > Sebastian Hilbert > Leipzig / Germany > [www.gnumed.de] -> PGP welcome, HTML ->/dev/null -- Sebastian Hilbert Leipzig / Germany [www.gnumed.de] -> PGP welcome, HTML ->/dev/null Faire Angebote beim Internetshoppen gibt es in meinem Onlineshop fairdeal.profiseller.de _______________________________________________ Gnumed-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumed-devel
