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Wiki Markup \[Minor\] In the right box, passing the Patient History is much less interesting than the patient's immediate history.
Wiki Markup \[Major\] When adding a new prescription, the 'dosage' should be compulsory. Right now we can add a new description that have no dosage, which doesn't make sense.
Wiki Markup \[Minor\] When adding a new prescription, we can specify a start date which is posterior to the end date.
Wiki Markup \[<span style="color: #222222">Cosmetic</span>\] In the administration panel, it is very unlikely to undo a drug administration that has been performed a long time ago. It might be useful to add a confirmation message.
Wiki Markup \[Major\] When adding a new prescription, the frequency should be more flexible, perhaps by adding a custom text if needed.
E.g. It is commonplace to prescribe a drug for the morning and the evening.
Wiki Markup \[Feature request\] The dosage can sometimes be variable, either increasing or decreasing over the time, depending on the evolution of the patient. Even more intricate but also commonly used, it is sometimes up to the nurse to decide what dose to administer to the patient. For instance, if the physician has prescribed more fine for a patient, the physician might simply say to the nurse to apply the usual protocol when administering morphine, which gives the nurse flexibility on the dose, and also the patient is given a morphine pump that he can use to medicate himself according to how much pain he feels (obviously such a device is limited so that a patient cannot put his life into danger).
Reflection
Discuss what you learned over the course of the iterative design process. If you did it again, what would you do differently? Focus in this part not on the specific design decisions of your project (which you already discussed in the Design section), but instead on the meta-level decisions about your design process: your risk assessments, your decisions about what features to prototype and which prototype techniques to use, and how you evaluated the results of your observations.