Academic Integrity: tutoring, explanations, and feedback — we don’t complete graded work or submit on a student’s behalf.

Is there an offline, gratis Linux application (preferably in the Debian / Ubuntu

ID: 658985 • Letter: I

Question

Is there an offline, gratis Linux application (preferably in the Debian / Ubuntu repositories) that can store, visualize and export medical data like weight, blood pressure, heart rate, taken medication?

The data should help me to gather long-time medical data like weight, blood pressure, heart rate, taken medication, ... so that I can give that to my physician in case I get ill. (see TED talk for the motivation)

The export should be in a usable format (XML / CSV / JSON / YAML).

The software is for personal use (hence: only one user).

The software can be used through the browser, but it should be offline (I don't want to give my data away).

It should be aimed for amateur users. (GNU Health is too complex and seems to be aimed for complete hospitals)

Explanation / Answer

I would suggest simply using Libra Office Calc - it fits all your requirements other than being used through the browser. Simply have one column for each of your required data items. I would add the use of a DVCS such as mercurial to allow you to track changes and as a backup mechanism.

Gratis Yes
Linux Available for Linux, Mac & Windows
store Yes in a spreadsheet format
visualize Graphing available
export medical data like weight, blood pressure, heart rate, taken medication Yes you can have whatever columns you need
The data should help me to gather long-time medical data like weight, blood pressure, heart rate, taken medication These would be your columns - I would suggest one page per month and one new spreadsheet per year
The export should be in a usable format (XML / CSV / JSON / YAML) Multiple formats are available for export
The software is for personal use Personal or Business use allowed but I would not recommend trying to use for more than a couple of people
The software can be used through the browser, No!
but it should be offline Yes unless you put it online
It should be aimed for amateur users. I would NOT recommend using a spreadsheet for professional use
GNU Health is too complex and seems to be aimed for complete hospitals *GNU Health is aimed for hospitals from the website "GNU Health is a free Health and Hospital Information System" there is also the excellent GNUMed but that is also aimed at health professionals.

Hire Me For All Your Tutoring Needs
Integrity-first tutoring: clear explanations, guidance, and feedback.
Drop an Email at
drjack9650@gmail.com
Chat Now And Get Quote