Please go to https://www.medfloss.org/.
Medfloss.org provides a comprehensive and structured overview of Free/Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS) projects in the domains of medical informatics and health care delivery. It is an open information portal that aims to foster the exchange of ideas, knowledge and experiences about existing projects and the related ecosystem.
Indivo is missing – http://www.indivohealth.org/
Thank you! I just added it.
OIO is missing – http://www.TxOutcome.Org
Wow, great list, thank you for compiling it!
You might also want to include the US Govt’s Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid: https://cabig.nci.nih.gov/
Thank you Andrew! I just added OIO to the category “Clinical Research” although I couldn’t find any recent news or release about the project (I want to list only active projects here with recent developments). By the way the download link at http://www.TxOutcome.Org doesn’t work.
You are welcome thickerson! Thanks for the hint! Wow, at caBIG they have developed quite some tools. After a brief review I added it to “Others” as there are projects of nearly every category available and I suppose that these primarily make sense only in the scope of caBIG.
brainvisa is missing : http://brainvisa.info/
Thank you Laurent! I added it to the category Visualization, although I couldn’t find any recent news or release about the project.
Europ’s standards for a EHR is the EN13606. This standard is build on OpenEHR, one of the largest Open Source projects for a EHR.
HL7 is a XML communication standard, which is not the same as a standard for a EHR… 🙂
Regards, Jan-Marc
Jan-Marc, thank you for your comment! Do you know what happened to the homepage of the CEN TC/251 (http://www.centc251.org/)? There appears just a log-in page to Livelink …
Thanks for collating this
OpenEHR has an open source java reference implementation and open source java archetype editor.
I also see https://www.i2b2.org has a clinical research oriented eclipse based workbench and SOA platform, based out of parters healthcare.
Thanks for the list; but I’ve been missing “my” lab-part of the list?!
Aren’t there any open-source laboratory-information-systems (I think there was a project called bika-lims or bika-health)?!
And the “fitting” standard for labs: http://www.loinc.org (Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes ).
Regards, Alexander
Nice List !
The Open Three (O3) Consortium
has some tools, you should not miss.
Regards, Gerhard
Gerhard, thanks for the hint! I did not yet add the O3 Consortium Web site to my list, as a registration is required to access the source code & binaries and this is not my understanding of being freely available.
Do you know under which license this software is distributed? I ran several times across this tools or citations about it and it seems like it is quite well used out there …