On Sun, 19 Oct 2003, plasticdoc wrote:
...
> Perhaps we could all agree on something. Fell free to take a look at the
> program Care2x.

J,

  Thanks for telling us about your project. Do you mind having a
discussion with some clarifying questions?

...
> It is mainly made in PHP.

What else in addition to PHP? Do you mean Javascript?

> It is mostly hardware and OS independent (Windows, Linux, Solaris, Unix).
> It works with most DBMS (Oracle, mybaseSQl, postgresSQL, DB2, MSSQL
> Server, etc).

What is the default/preferred platform, if any? Otherwise, what have you
tested the system on?

> Once installed a simple web browser is all you need to work with it
> (IExplorer, Netscape, Mozilla, Opera, etc.).
> It has many modules, take whatever modules you want and use it in your
> projects as you like.

Fantastic! Have you studied FreeMed (www.freemed.org)? It is also done
with PHP.

> You may see it working in real time. And you may see it now, not in a
> distant future.
> Just try the demo at http://www.care2x.org. Feel free to add patients,

What works for username and password?

> It is also user-configurable, modular and scalable.

How can the user add additional screens/forms?

...

> It can integrate almost any type of services, systems, departments,
> clinic, processes, data,

How does Care2x handle legacy or pre-existing data created by another
software system?

...
> CARE 2002 uses a standard SQL database format for storing and retrieving
> data. The use of a single data format solves the problem of data
> redundancy.

What is this "single data format"? Could you kindly point to a description
of what this entails?

> When configured accordingly, it can support multiple database
> configuration to enhance data security and integrity.
...

Please clarify what this may mean. An example of multiple database
configurations to increase data security and/or integrity would be quite
informative.

Thanks in advance,

Andrew
---
Andrew P. Ho, M.D.
OIO: Open Infrastructure for Outcomes
www.TxOutcome.Org

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