10 projects tagged "Health"
Diet Monger Ass Kicker (DMAK) helps the user design diets according to the user's specifications. The EuGTK version of DMAK, unlike the wxEuphoria version, does not require a *.so file, which was a problem for some people. It uses USDA data, and does sorting and filtering and calculations, and has Google search features, and gives you virtually all knowledge known to man about 7500 foods and 140 nutrients. It uses *.req files, which you can create or edit, and which determine the nutrient requirements. It remembers your settings. It has file features and clipboard features. Documentation is thorough. You can upgrade the data every time the USDA updates their data.
Foods and Moods is an application that tracks what you eat and how you feel. It is aimed primarily towards people trying to track which foods may trigger their digestive problems. It does this by keeping two logs: a log of the foods you eat and a log of your moods. This provides you with a searchable history using keywords or "tags", so you may see for yourself if there is any relationship between the two. It doesn't attempt to do any medical or nutritional analysis.
FreeDiams is a program for making prescriptions of pharmaceutical drugs and testing their interactions. It is the result of building the FreeMedForms prescriber plugins into a standalone application. It is developed by medical doctors and is intended for use by these same professionals. It can be used to prescribe drugs and test drug interactions within a prescription. It can be linked to any application by way of its command line parameters. FreeDiams can use several drug databases, including the FDA_USA drug database, the French AFSSAPS drug database, the Canadian drug databases, and the South African drug database (SAEPI).
OpenHIM is a health information mediator that aims to enable easier interoperability between disparate health information systems. It was developed as the Rwandan reference implementation of a health information exchange for maternal health, and is intended for use in low resource settings.
What's My Heart Rate allows you to measure your heart rate by just looking at your screen. It's easy and convenient, without the need to press your finger on your camera lens. Your heartbeat causes micro color changes on your face. What's My Heart Rate uses the front camera and a software algorithm to detect these micro changes, with beat-to-beat accuracy. The algorithm is based on the non-contact photoplethysmography concept.
iBodyFat calculates your body fat percentage and keeps a log of your results. Two different calculations are presented for each measurement made. The body fat percentage formulas used by iBodyFat are the girth body fat calculations invented by the U.S. Navy and professional body builder and writer Hugo Rivera. For taking girth body fat measurements, no special equipment is needed. All that is required is a vinyl tape measure.
iKeepAtive is a fitness scheduling app, designed primarily to help users schedule their workouts and integrate with the system calendar to make sure you do them. The application also has Calories tracking, diet tracking, and daily portrait tracking. The user interface is presented in a simple, 5-view design. It also includes BMI, BMR, and TDEE calculators.
pdr (personal data recorder) and pdx (personal data expert) are applications that collect and evaluate mostly numeric personal data. The intended use case is for logging individual medical data (blood sugar, blood pressure, body temperature, weight, heart rate, and medications), but they can also be used for technical, sports, fitness, weather, environmental, or financial data. They work on a continuous flow of numbers in time that you want to monitor. Every data item can also be commented by text. pdr can use Twitter and email accounts for data input, which makes mobile phones usable for data input. It is one of the few free applications for diabetics.