Open source project for the development of PHP code for Bioinformatics. Classes are under development in a try to rewrite other bio projects into PHP, as for example bioPerl or BioPhyton. A wiki-like service has been developed to allow registered users to modify the code.
Additionally, minitools (open and copy one page scripts) are available for some widely used asks: Temperature (Tm) Calculator, PCR Amplification, Microsatellite Repeats Finder, Palindromic Sequences finder, Oligonucleotide Frequency, Alignment of DNA/Protein sequences, Restriction digest of DNA, translation and reverse translation, Microarray analysis, Protein sequence information...
Specific minitools for statistical analysis are also available: dat description (Mean, Median, Mode, Minimum, Maximum, Range, Variance, Standard Deviation, Skewness, Kurtosis...), Discriminatory Power, Linear Correlation and Regression, etc.
The OpenEMR community is dedicated to guarding OpenEMRs status as a free, open source software solution for medical practices. Its members are comprised of software developers, as well as physicians and others with extensive medical and billing knowledge, all with the common goal of making OpenEMR a superior alternative to its proprietary counterparts.
The projects home is SourceForge, at http://sourceforge.net/pr ojects/openemr/. There are additional project resources at http://www.oemr.org/, including a demonstration site.
Calorie Queen is a food management system that displays the nutrition facts for foods. You can download the USDA database which has thousands of foods for starters. There is also the ability to add and delete foods in the admin section. I only ask that you rate my scripts if you like them. Thanks.
MirrorMed is a next generation EHR and Practice Management System. It draw code and inspiration from FreeMED OpenEMR and ClearHealth. As a result it has some of the most advanced features available under the GPL.
A full site for medical articles, just some of the features :
Easy Set up
Admin panel
Add / Edit / Delete Articles
HTML Tags allowed in articles
Mod rewrite to create solid links
Link exchange built in
Visitors can comment on and rate each article
RSS newsfeed
Google Adsence built in
Automatically creates XML Site Map
Comes with over 60 articles pre loaded.
Let your visitors calculate their target heart rate with this script. The script is written in PHP and is free.
RxIS is an extremely powerful yet simple browser based Electronic Health Records Management System. It offers a comprehensive solution in health record creation, portability and analysis. In today's healthcare scenario in India , there is very little documentation of the care delivered to the patient leading to very high chances of improper treatment in the absence of historical records leading to legal complications.
RxIS–Hospital is implemented in the premises of the organization on their own hardware and network. It will have a web access module allowing patients and doctors to access the system from outside the organization through the internet from anywhere in the world. The Hospital model has 12 Core Modules: Front office, Appointment Scheduling, Out Patient (OPD), In Patient (IPD), Clinical Module (EMR), Laboratory, Radiology (with or without PACS), Patient Access, Pharmacy, Inventory, Billing and Admin Control. It also has OT, CSSD, Dietary, Housekeeping, Account Receivable, Insurance, Doctor Share, Duplicate Registration and MIS reports modules.
Occupational health and safety involve every level of an organization, instilling a safety culture that reduces accidents for workers and improves the bottom line for managers. When Health and safety are part of the organization's way of life, everyone wins.Truworth has developed an enterprise level solution that not only provides guidance information for developing a comprehensive occupational health program, it helps monitor and record the vital wellness indicators of all employees in an organization on a multi-location basis.
Do you have kith?
Dictionary.com defines “kith” as “acquaintances, friends, neighbors, or the like; persons living in the same general locality and forming a more or less cohesive group.”
Your need your kith and your kith need you. Human beings necessarily depend on each other. As John Donne said, “No man is an island.”
Just as we may not be aware of our big toe, until it hurts—we may not be aware of our dependence on our kith—until we hurt. That is what happened to Maria—and it changed how she related to neighbors and friends for the rest of her life.
When Jorge died, Maria had no one. Not only had she lost her husband of thirteen years, but she lost only support; her only confidant.
Shortly after Jorge’s death, Maria started having stomach pain. She ordinarily would have talked to Jorge about it, but he was gone. She figured the stomach pain was due to grief. And besides, who would watch the kids when she went to the doctor? Two months after Jorge’s death, Maria’s appendix ruptured, and she became violently ill at work.
Maria noticed that the intense stomach pain would not go away before she left for work that morning. By lunchtime she was doubled over, heaving in her garbage can. Her supervisor called “911”, and Maria was quickly transported to the hospital. Marie’s major concern, before the ambulance took her away, was about who would watch the children when they came home from school.
Suddenly, others needed to be involved in her life. The network of persons that she brushed by daily, but did not interact with much—all became aware of how very alone Maria was: Her colleagues at work, the school, her neighbors, and the people in her church. Everyone pitched in during the week she was in the hospital. But they could not organize the support system necessary to meet Maria’s ongoing needs—only she could do that for herself.
Starting From Ground Zero
Maria noticed, while in the hospital, that she was not as alone as she thought she was. She had kids—and she had kith. Certainly, Maria missed the more intimate relationship she had enjoyed with her husband. She was resolved to build more intimate relationships, but that would take time. Until then, she would concentrate her efforts on building relationships with her kids and her kith. Tending to her small community of relationships became the most important thing she did every day.
Maria was so appreciative that her kith filled in the gap left by Jorge’s death during the week she was in the hospital. She wrote letters of appreciation to everyone who helped: Her coworker picked the children up from school and kept them in her home while Marie was gone; her neighbor who picked up her mail and mowed her lawn; the friends and coworkers who came during visiting hours to brighten her day. Maria read each letter out loud to the recipients of her letters. She choked up a little when she shared her deep feelings of appreciation; but her kith did not seem to mind.
Appreciating her kith was not new to her—but she had never taken the time to express her gratitude. She decided that from that time forward, she would not keep the good things she thought about her kith to herself—she would seek out the person she had positive thoughts about and let them know.
She thought about what had, in the past, stopped her from reaching out as much as she needed to. The immediate answers were “time” and “not knowing how to start”. “There are ways,” she told herself, “that I can work around these barriers.” Nurturing kith, she realized, was as much of a reward as it was a responsibility. Maybe tending this responsibility could help her feel more alive. She had the will to restructure her life to make her relationships the focal point.
Building a System to Identify Opportunities to Connect
To simply the amount of work it would take to contact kith, she spent an evening listing the names, phone numbers, addresses, and e-mail addresses of her kith her computer and syncing it to her cell phone. She also set up a card file to keep track of the small details that would help identify opportunities to connect with kith and where to start: Birthdays, names of children, interests, and small details of conversations with her kith.
Before she went to bed each night, she updated her file system with what she had learned about her kith during the day. This practice gave her a good starting point when she reengaged the person the next time.
She spent at least an hour a day relating to a person or persons in her kith. Phone calls, sharing lunch or break time, going on walks—she found many ways of including others in her life.
Soon, people began to talk about how much they appreciated Maria’s thoughtfulness. By putting some thought and effort into the relationships she already had, she felt her life expand from the inside outward as she nurtured and was nurtured by her kith.
Katrina
Moxie mental health makes people stronger than strong. How is that possible? Consider this Aesop fable comparing the reed with the oak tree.
An oak and a reed were arguing about their strength. When a strong wind came up, the reed avoided being uprooted by bending and leaning with the gusts of wind. But the oak stood firm and was torn up by the roots.
How do you try to portray “strength” to others? To people who act like oak trees, “strong” means “being right” or resisting other people’s point of view. This “strength” is really just Insecurity with a mean face and a loud voice. The need to be right depletes the quality of relationships with others, and leaves others feeling deflated and alienated.
How Bending With the Wind Can Save Your Relationship
But Brian was a reed. He had learned from experience to value the opposition. He knew he had the right to mistakes, as did others. He also knew that whenever one person in an intimate relationship feels that they have “lost” in a disagreement—both people lose.
Which is why, when Chelsea told him she was unhappy with her relationship with him, he did not put up his emotional dukes, and punch back by listing all the reasons he was unhappy with her. He did not even put on an emotional flack vest, and start defending himself. Instead, he told her that he wanted to hear her feelings.
She told him some things that did sting his ego—but he kept perspective by reminding himself that Chelsea was more important to him than his pride. She did not like how he made love. She interpreted five minutes of foreplay as meaning that he only cared about himself.
He controlled the money in the family—and she wanted to share the power. She felt like a child when she had to ask for money for personal needs—or even groceries.
She felt he was always too busy to interact with her. He spent his evenings, after work, staring at a laptop, answering email and playing solitaire. She would like him to look at her, smile with his eyes, and sometimes just hold her. She would also like to share her thoughts with him, and hear about what was going on in his world.
How Did Brian and Chelsea’s Life Change?
Brian agreed with most of what she said—except for the part about only caring about himself. He wanted her to know how much he cherished her—but verbally debating the point wouldn’t work. As she wound down on her remarks, he looked her in the eyes, smiled, took her hand gently and said, “I guess this shows how much I need to change.”
Brian and Chelsea kept talking that night. And the night after that—and every night after that. They even talked about their sexual encounters. Brian did some research on how to make evening romance more pleasurable for his wife—neither one of had known there were so many options. Chelsea suggested that they open three bank accounts—one for him, one for her, and one for their expenses, that they would both contribute to. Brian had not realized that Chelsea felt like a beggar when it came time to buy groceries or get her hair styled. And for the after -dinner hours—they developed a new tradition. Evenings were spent on the deck, and not in front of the computer. Home became a place of intimacy—frustrations and triumphs were shared; ideas were exchanged; personal needs were discussed without shame; the future was dreamed about; and hurts were soothed.
Katrina
