CloudPMS is a lightweight, cloud-based Practice Management System designed for independent doctors, clinics, polyclinics, and small nursing homes. It streamlines everyday OPD operations—appointments, billing, digital prescriptions, case records, and basic clinical workflows—without requiring IT staff or complex training.
When you visit a doctor’s clinic, get a blood test at a lab, or are admitted to a hospital, different computers and software systems are used. One system records your personal details, another stores your lab results, another keeps track of your billing, and so on. But have you ever wondered how all these systems share information with each other smoothly?
This is where HL7 comes in.
When you visit a doctor or hospital, a lot more happens behind the scenes than just a check-up or treatment. Doctors must record your illness, your symptoms, and the care you receive in a way that every hospital, insurance company, and even government health department can understand. To make this possible, the world uses a system called ICD — International Classification of Diseases.
CloudLIS (Laboratory Information System) is a powerful, cloud-based solution designed for pathology labs, diagnostic centers, collection points, and small-to-large laboratory networks across India. It streamlines everything—from sample collection to automated machine interfacing, reporting, and coordination with referring doctors and clinics.
When you visit a clinic, get a lab test, or buy medicine from a pharmacy, your health information gets stored in many different computer systems. But these systems often use different formats and may not understand each other. This creates problems when your data needs to move from one place to another. This is where FHIR comes in.
When you go for a blood test, urine test, X-ray, or any kind of medical measurement, the hospital collects your sample and sends it to a laboratory. Different labs may use different machines, methods, or report formats. This often creates confusion — especially when you change hospitals or need to compare reports over time. To solve this problem, the world uses a system called LOINC.
CloudHMS is a comprehensive, enterprise-ready Hospital Management System designed for day-care centers, 20–200 bed nursing homes, multi-specialty hospitals, surgical centers, and multi-branch healthcare networks.
When you visit a doctor, get an X-ray, undergo a minor surgery, or even receive a simple injection, these medical services are documented. But because hospitals, clinics, and insurance systems use different names for procedures, a universal method is needed to avoid confusion. That’s where CPT comes in.
Whenever you get an X-ray, CT scan, MRI, ultrasound, or any medical imaging test, the machine produces digital pictures of the inside of your body. But these images are not simple photos like the ones you take on your phone. They contain medical measurements, machine settings, and important details that doctors use for diagnosis. This is where DICOM comes in.
Whenever you visit a doctor, take a lab test, or get admitted to a hospital, many documents are created—prescriptions, discharge summaries, lab reports, referral letters, imaging reports, and more. These documents contain important details about your health. But different clinics and hospitals often create these documents in different styles and formats. This makes it difficult for doctors to read or exchange information smoothly.
This is where CDA becomes useful.
Healthcare is full of medical terms—names of diseases, symptoms, tests, and treatments. Different doctors or hospitals may use different words for the same condition, which can create confusion. This is where SNOMED CT helps.
India’s healthcare system is large and diverse—hospitals, clinics, labs, pharmacies, insurance companies, and digital health apps all operate differently. Because of this, a patient often has medical records scattered across many places, making it difficult to get continuous and coordinated care.
To solve this problem, the Government of India launched NDHM—now known as the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM).
Medicines often have many names—brand names, generic names, short names, and even local nicknames. For example: Crocin, Tylenol, and Paracetamol; Augmentin, Amoxiclav, and Amoxicillin + Clavulanic Acid; Metformin vs Glyciphage.
These naming differences can easily confuse both patients and healthcare providers.
To avoid such confusion, healthcare systems use RxNorm, a standard way to name and code medicines.
Healthcare is complicated, and hospital bills can often feel confusing or unpredictable. Two patients with similar conditions may receive very different bills depending on hospital, location, or how long they stayed. To make hospital billing clearer, fairer, and more standardized, many countries use something called DRG.
When you visit a hospital or clinic, many services happen behind the scenes—equipment is used, tests are done, procedures are performed, and sometimes special supplies like bandages or wheelchairs are provided. To manage all these items and services in an organized and standardized way, the healthcare system uses a special coding method called HCPCS. Although it sounds technical, HCPCS plays an important role in making healthcare smoother, more transparent, and easier to manage.