The un-official, Draft 8 of the upcoming American Medical Informatics
Association Open Source Working Group white paper to be voted on
November 9th can be found http://ignaciovaldes.com/amia. It will be
voted on for ratification on November 9th-11th or so. Action is needed
on your part to answer the question: If open source is so great why is
no one using it? There is no aggregate data that I can find to counter
this opinion. If you know of a Free/Open Source EHR/EMR deployment and
could please send three pieces of information on each deployment that
you have by Wednesday November 7th: General Location, software version
and most importantly NUMBER OF PATIENTS IN SYSTEM. This paper could
have national impact with this data. Please respond by email to
ivaldes@hal-pc.org if you are able to obtain this data.
Does ANYONE list his/her numbers of patients hosted by the system? I tried to find that number for several larger commercial systems and got the MdD’s answer of milliions and milliions (of patients) … I could find the number of doctors rather easily.
The dbMotion solution, developed in Israel, is today covering nearly 6 million patients in Israel, and 7 million patients in the UPMC installation in the US.
Norbert Lipszyc
Thomas discussed the Ocean system, which is (as he said himself) closed
source, which is (in my opinion) a commercial proprietary system.
There is nothing wrong with that, but, it is exactly what you objected
against.
It is not that important, but I believe the reason for your objection in
that particular case is someting else than you said. Or if not, then
your objection is not consistently.