Haven't tried it yet, but will.

It seems from the demo to be a little difficult if you have to navigate the whole universe of a language.

Has anyone trained it on their own clinical notes and then tried to write a note?

It seems like you could customize the predictive engine by substituting meta-regions that correspond to sections of a progress note or complete health exam. For example instead of an alphabet, present the main headings of a note. Chose a heading like Family History. Within that the universe would be very limited and navigation very obvious and quick. Once an family member was picked, then common familial illness would populate the right side of the screen. Any time a free text was needed a tunnel into classic Dasher could be used to create text. An escape area would take the user back to Family history level to chose another ancestor and then dive back into organized text. When done with Family history the escape would lead to the main level where social history could be chosen.

Maybe it is just late at night, but this seems like a potentially revolutionary tool for handhelds and an interesting idea for note creation on desktops.

Is someone working on a medical version?

Bruce Slater
----- Original Message ----- From: "Horst Herb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2004 10:34 PM
Subject: Re: Dasher (was Re: CPOE time studies.)



On Fri, 15 Oct 2004 06:59, Tim Churches wrote:
I suspect it would be much better that the Graffiti handwritten letter
recognition system used on my PalmPilot too. If it is good on a
PalmPilot, then it would be good on other PDAs.

it's brilliant on my Zaurii

Horst





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