In addition to custom medical apps at the request of healthcare providers and software to create your own apps, everywhereIM also develops its own medical apps. These apps, labeled “appendix”, are aimed at a specific medical target group.
The apps are an addition to daily practice, where we present practical information from medical guidelines and protocols in an accessible and visually attractive way. In this way, the information from the guidelines and protocols can be quickly applied in practice. In addition, you can add personal notes to specific parts yourself, so that everything that is important to you is bundled in one app.
By publishing these apps in-house (without subsidy), we can maintain and enrich them for a long time with the help of our doctors and expert editors. This is how we contribute to sustainable innovation in healthcare.
Are you, like many other healthcare providers, curious about the convenience of our apps?
appendix apps
Acute Medicine
Anaesthesiology
Antibiotics
Anticoagulation
Gastroenterology
Gynecology
ICU Nursing
Orthopaedics
Tropical Medicine
Our users in 2021
Read more about the importance of medical guideline apps (Dutch)
In an article for ICT&Health, Sebastiaan van der Storm (MD, PhD student in the field of e-Health) wrote about the process of turning medical guidelines into apps and how everywhereIM’s No-Code Greg can play a role in this.
In an article for ICT&Health, Sebastiaan van der Storm (MD, PhD in the field of e-Health) wrote about the process of turning medical guidelines into apps and how everywhereIM’s No-Code Greg can play a role in this.
Interactive Tools
The appendix apps of everywhereIM contain scoring tools that make the interpretation of the guidelines even easier. After going through a tool, an advice is generated in accordance with the most recent guidelines. Examples of these tools are the SIRS scoring tool and the Early Warning scoring tool.
“I am glad that I no longer have to search in extensive PDF guidelines. With the medical app, I can find the right content effortlessly.”
Dr. P. (Pieter) Kubben, Neurosurgeon in the University Medical Centre of Maastricht