My experience is that the structures are significantly different and you must re-write your reports. However, if you have written reports in OE the structures in ITS for the most part parallel those of OE. In fact it seems that ITS is just a major copy of OE - with a few $T RAD tidbits thrown in. If you have ever worked at a salad bar you'll get the idea. Note that a frequently used index in OE - the order date index - is replaced in ITS with the service date index (which, to some degree, is preferable anyway).
>>> "McGaw, Douglas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 07/19/07 5:03 PM >>> We are a Magic shop and are going to change from $T RAD to NPR ITS early next year. As the chief NPR report writer, I was chagrined to find that the reports written in RADRW.EXAM and RADRW.LOCATOR may have to be rewritten from scratch. (I have a couple for which the source code alone goes to 9 pages of printout.) While confident that we can clear this hurdle, I would be interested in the experiences of others who have made the same migration and what options may exist for moving/upgrading reports rather than rewriting them. Douglas B. McGaw IS Coordinator Newman Regional Health 1201 W. 12th Ave. Emporia, KS 66801 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 620-343-6800 x 1130 fax: 620-340-6799 =*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*= To subscribe or unsubscribe to the meditech-l, visit http://mtusers.com/mailman/listinfo/meditech-l_mtusers.com To check the status of the meditech-l, visit MTUsers.NET For help, email [EMAIL PROTECTED] Please visit and add information to the MTUsers WikiPedia at MTUsers.NET/mwiki ______________________________________ meditech-l mailing list [email protected] http://mtusers.com/mailman/listinfo/meditech-l_mtusers.com
