Inspiration
Kavya's friend works in the healthcare industry and told Kavya how difficult it can be to manage patient's medication schedules. Our goal was for Patient Flow to provide healthcare providers with a visual daily calendar of patients' medications, dosages, and times. This way, patient care would be more streamlined, efficient, and timely, and providers would be better able to organize and visualize their busy schedules.
What it does
With the current functionality, there is a website that greets the user with a button that takes the user to another page to view all the current patients. From there, the user can delete a patient record or update an existing record. We also have an API that communicates with a database, which stores all the patient information.
How we built it
We built the website primarily using JavaScript and React, including the aesthetic design, buttons, forms, and links to other pages in the website. We also created the API and the database using SQL Server, C#, and asp.net Core.
Challenges we ran into
We had challenges on the front-end side with creating the links between pages on the website, but we fixed that are talking with a mentor. We also had some difficult with git and pushing the back-end work to our GitHub repo. We also had difficulties with the current .net version.
Accomplishments that we're proud of
We are proud that we made a website with multiple pages, an API, and a database. We are also proud that we were able to work together to come up with a cohesive project idea.
What we learned
We learned a lot about web development, using libraries with web development, working with APIs, working with git, project management, and working together to create a project idea and design.
What's next for Patient Flow
In the future, we would connect the API with the website we made so that we could store and manage the patient data.
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