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Cancer eStaging Standalone Program-Sanjoy Sanyal Patent

Implementation Flowchart for Cancer e-Staging Program
Implementation Step 1 - Content Page of the Program. This is the page for first click

Implementation Step 2 - Tumor Status Page of the Program. This is the page for second mouse click

Implementation Step 3 - Lymph Node Status Page of the Program. This is the page for third mouse click
 

Implementation Step 4 - Metastases Status Page of the Program. This is the page for fourth mouse click
 

Implementation Step 5 - Cancer Staging Page of the Program. This is the final page of the Program
 
This interactive e-Staging tool is standalone (in .mht format), simpler (requiring only 4 mouse clicks), quicker (just a few seconds) and easier than those from other centers, which are all Web-based. It can be used by any physician with minimum computer skills. It is portable, can be used in any hand-held device anywhere in the hospital or clinic, and does not require Internet connection. It eliminates consulting complicated TNM charts, which are different for every tumor, and also the need to rely on memory, thus reducing errors and inconsistency between physicians. The tool can be incorporated in a hospital EMR with HL7. It is future-scalable, with options to add more tumor sites to the system.
This paper was authored by Dr Sanjoy Sanyal, Professor and Course Director of Neuroscience in Medical University of the Americas, Potworks, Charlestown, Nevis, St.Kitts-Nevis, West Indies.  It was accepted at the international Stanford Medicine X Conference, and presented as a poster in Stanford University School of Medicine, LKSC Conference Center, 291 Campus Drive, Stanford, California, CA 94305-5101, USA, on 30 September, 2012.
Provisional Patent Application accepted by United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), giving it a 'Patent Pending' status, as of January 2013.
 
This interactive e-Staging tool is standalone (in .mht format), simpler (requiring only 4 mouse clicks), quicker (just a few seconds) and easier than those from other centers, which are all Web-based. It can be used by any physician with minimum computer skills. It is portable, can be used in any hand-held device anywhere in the hospital or clinic, and does not require Internet connection. It eliminates consulting complicated TNM charts, which are different for every tumor, and also the need to rely on memory, thus reducing errors and inconsistency between physicians. The tool can be incorporated in a hospital EMR with HL7. It is future-scalable, with options to add more tumor sites to the system.
This paper was authored by Dr Sanjoy Sanyal, Professor and Course Director of Neuroscience in Medical University of the Americas, Potworks, Charlestown, Nevis, St.Kitts-Nevis, West Indies.  It was accepted at the international Stanford Medicine X Conference, and presented as a poster in Stanford University School of Medicine, LKSC Conference Center, 291 Campus Drive, Stanford, California, CA 94305-5101, USA, on 30 September, 2012.
Provisional Patent Application accepted by United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), giving it a 'Patent Pending' status, as of January 2013.
 
This interactive e-Staging tool is standalone (in .mht format), simpler (requiring only 4 mouse clicks), quicker (just a few seconds) and easier than those from other centers, which are all Web-based. It can be used by any physician with minimum computer skills. It is portable, can be used in any hand-held device anywhere in the hospital or clinic, and does not require Internet connection. It eliminates consulting complicated TNM charts, which are different for every tumor, and also the need to rely on memory, thus reducing errors and inconsistency between physicians. The tool can be incorporated in a hospital EMR with HL7. It is future-scalable, with options to add more tumor sites to the system.
This paper was authored by Dr Sanjoy Sanyal, Professor and Course Director of Neuroscience in Medical University of the Americas, Potworks, Charlestown, Nevis, St.Kitts-Nevis, West Indies.  It was accepted at the international Stanford Medicine X Conference, and presented as a poster in Stanford University School of Medicine, LKSC Conference Center, 291 Campus Drive, Stanford, California, CA 94305-5101, USA, on 30 September, 2012.
Provisional Patent Application accepted by United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), giving it a 'Patent Pending' status, as of January 2013.
 
This interactive e-Staging tool is standalone (in .mht format), simpler (requiring only 4 mouse clicks), quicker (just a few seconds) and easier than those from other centers, which are all Web-based. It can be used by any physician with minimum computer skills. It is portable, can be used in any hand-held device anywhere in the hospital or clinic, and does not require Internet connection. It eliminates consulting complicated TNM charts, which are different for every tumor, and also the need to rely on memory, thus reducing errors and inconsistency between physicians. The tool can be incorporated in a hospital EMR with HL7. It is future-scalable, with options to add more tumor sites to the system.
This paper was authored by Dr Sanjoy Sanyal, Professor and Course Director of Neuroscience in Medical University of the Americas, Potworks, Charlestown, Nevis, St.Kitts-Nevis, West Indies.  It was accepted at the international Stanford Medicine X Conference, and presented as a poster in Stanford University School of Medicine, LKSC Conference Center, 291 Campus Drive, Stanford, California, CA 94305-5101, USA, on 30 September, 2012.
Provisional Patent Application accepted by United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), giving it a 'Patent Pending' status, as of January 2013.
 
This interactive e-Staging tool is standalone (in .mht format), simpler (requiring only 4 mouse clicks), quicker (just a few seconds) and easier than those from other centers, which are all Web-based. It can be used by any physician with minimum computer skills. It is portable, can be used in any hand-held device anywhere in the hospital or clinic, and does not require Internet connection. It eliminates consulting complicated TNM charts, which are different for every tumor, and also the need to rely on memory, thus reducing errors and inconsistency between physicians. The tool can be incorporated in a hospital EMR with HL7. It is future-scalable, with options to add more tumor sites to the system.
This paper was authored by Dr Sanjoy Sanyal, Professor and Course Director of Neuroscience in Medical University of the Americas, Potworks, Charlestown, Nevis, St.Kitts-Nevis, West Indies.  It was accepted at the international Stanford Medicine X Conference, and presented as a poster in Stanford University School of Medicine, LKSC Conference Center, 291 Campus Drive, Stanford, California, CA 94305-5101, USA, on 30 September, 2012.
Provisional Patent Application accepted by United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), giving it a 'Patent Pending' status, as of January 2013.
 
Cancer eStaging Standalone Program-Sanjoy Sanyal Patent
Published:

Cancer eStaging Standalone Program-Sanjoy Sanyal Patent

This work was presented by the author in Medicine X Conference in Stanford University School of Medicine on 30 September, 2011. It was converted Read More

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