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Post by mdeyedoc on Mar 27, 2014 22:55:20 GMT -6
I see that we can now go from a patient task to the patient by double clicking on the Pt Task item and then double clicking on the patient name in the task window. Thanks!
I noticed that Display Pt Acctid is one of the Task setting options under the Reminders menu (BTW, why not call it Tasks when it's about Task settings?). Would it be possible to make clicking on that Pt Acctid link directly to the patient? That way we don't have to open the task item unless there's a long message. Also, FYI, the Display Date Created and Date Modified settings are displaying the time, not the date.
It would be great if we could assign a task to a patient from the patient screen or records. More often than not, we will already be on that patient when we want to assign a task to them. So why not have a task button right there that automatically assigns the task to the current patient instead of going to the Task section, looking up the patient and creating the task?
It would be awesome if we had a way to send the text from a med rec field to the text for a pt task. That way we could type the task in that box or assign common task to buttons and then hit a task button to create a task for that patient with that message.
Finally, I'd like to put in another request for making patient task a separate function from the other tasks and accessible from any area of the program. I see them as having different priorities and if they were easier to use from within the patient or record section, I think they would be used more often and other tasks items could get lost amongst the patient items.
Marcia
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Post by peter@crystalpm on Apr 8, 2014 22:05:19 GMT -6
We used to call it "Reminders", but Tasks seemed more forceful. It didn't appropriate to assign a reminder to an employee and then make them sign off that they finished it. I think what you are suggesting is more like our original intent of having a place where you could have reminders attached to a patient record. It really doesn't make sense to assign a task to a patient, since they can't see it and probably wouldn't do it. It's really a reminder to do something for the patient. I like the way you are thinking about this!
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