blog.openclinica.com
Engineering OpenClinica’s Future | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/2015/03/19/engineering-openclinicas-future
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. Engineering OpenClinica’s Future. March 19, 2015. We recently introduced OpenClinica Participate. As transformational as these patient engagement capabilities can be, what we’ve been working on is about more than that. This is about a foundation for the future of the OpenClinica project. As I briefly pointed out in an earlier post. OpenClinica Participate forms are powered by the new enketo-express. As my 5 year-old s...
blog.openclinica.com
mobile | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/tag/mobile
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. Engage. Learn. Repeat. July 2, 2015. As the user base grew, we listened to users and understood that integration and interoperability were another major obstacle. While we don’t claim to have fully cracked that nut yet, OpenClinica’s CDISC ODM-based APIs have been pretty widely adopted and helped to drive some significant. Why is this important? The great (and often unrecognized) news is that so many of the people inv...
blog.openclinica.com
patient engagement | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/tag/patient-engagement
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. Calculating ROI for ePRO. August 3, 2015. I recently delivered a webinar titled Getting Started with eCOA/ePRO,. In which roughly a third of attendees polled cited expense as the number one reason that has prevented them from adopting an ePRO solution. So what does ePRO really cost? Is it worth it? Let’s start by taking a look at the costs that are unique to each approach. Paper vs. eCOA. There are some additional ben...
blog.openclinica.com
Integration | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/category/integration-2
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. March 13, 2015. Apple, Inc. has a remarkable ability to capture the world’s attention when announcing the next big thing. They have honed their well-known Reality Distortion Field. ResearchKit has grabbed such attention. Maybe not as much as The Watch. But amongst the minority of us who pay attention to such things. And the reactions have been typically polarized it’s either an ethics quagmire. There’s truth to ...
blog.openclinica.com
ePRO | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/tag/epro
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. Reducing friction in patient engagement: an (unconventional) case study. September 24, 2015. Our quest for frictionless, electronic patient reported outcomes (ePRO) data capture has us looking for novel ways to engage patients and streamline process. I’d like to share a fun and interesting example of this work, in which we used Participate. Attendees filled out the form, sprinkled with fun health habit questions, then...
blog.openclinica.com
Mobile | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/category/mobile-2
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. Reducing friction in patient engagement: an (unconventional) case study. September 24, 2015. Our quest for frictionless, electronic patient reported outcomes (ePRO) data capture has us looking for novel ways to engage patients and streamline process. I’d like to share a fun and interesting example of this work, in which we used Participate. Attendees filled out the form, sprinkled with fun health habit questions, then...
blog.openclinica.com
Conferences & Events | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/category/conferences-events
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. Reducing friction in patient engagement: an (unconventional) case study. September 24, 2015. Our quest for frictionless, electronic patient reported outcomes (ePRO) data capture has us looking for novel ways to engage patients and streamline process. I’d like to share a fun and interesting example of this work, in which we used Participate. Attendees filled out the form, sprinkled with fun health habit questions, then...
blog.openclinica.com
Informed Consent | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/tag/informed-consent
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. March 13, 2015. Apple, Inc. has a remarkable ability to capture the world’s attention when announcing the next big thing. They have honed their well-known Reality Distortion Field. ResearchKit has grabbed such attention. Maybe not as much as The Watch. But amongst the minority of us who pay attention to such things. And the reactions have been typically polarized it’s either an ethics quagmire. There’s truth to ...
blog.openclinica.com
ePRO | The OpenClinica Blog
http://blog.openclinica.com/category/epro
Musings on open source and open standards in clinical trial software and healthcare IT. Reducing friction in patient engagement: an (unconventional) case study. September 24, 2015. Our quest for frictionless, electronic patient reported outcomes (ePRO) data capture has us looking for novel ways to engage patients and streamline process. I’d like to share a fun and interesting example of this work, in which we used Participate. Attendees filled out the form, sprinkled with fun health habit questions, then...