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Earlier this year, OpenMRS participated once again in Google Summer of Code, a worldwide program organized by Google’s Open Source Programs Office to expose university students to the world of free and open source software, and encourage those students to become long-term contributors to projects that interest them. OpenMRS has been participating in Summer of Code every year since 2007, and our 5th year was arguably our most successful yet. This year, 15 motivated students successfully completed project to focus or extend the OpenMRS health care IT platform in ways that will have significant impact for our global community of users.
OpenMRS is a web-based medical record system originally designed for use in the developing world, and is now used on every continent on the globe in all kinds of health care environments, from research laboratories to hospitals to small clinics in remote villages, and even via mobile devices that collect data door-to-door.
Throughout the summer, our students become full contributors in good standing in the OpenMRS community. They present their projects’ work in progress to other developers and users and often contribute their code to our software releases to support health care professionals saving lives around the world. Unlike many other summer internships that students may have during the summer, our students were responsible for planning and delivery of “real-life projects” that came from needs and requests from people installing and using OpenMRS.
Some projects were dedicated to improving the core OpenMRS platform, and some built add-on modules to support specific types of clinical activities. Some projects focused on making the installation of OpenMRS easier, and some focused on helping improve collaboration for our volunteer community. And if the presentations our students made this semester were any indication, all were exciting ways to write code and save lives. There’s not space here to describe each project in detail, but you should check out our students and projects on the OpenMRS Wiki and learn more about them:
Since we started participating in Google Summer of Code, we’re really proud that so many of our students have stayed active in the OpenMRS community and continued to contribute their talents after the program ended. In fact, three of our students have gone on to become full-time OpenMRS developers paid by various organizations involved in our community.
We continue to be more and more impressed with the students who are interested in our work, and are proud to welcome them into the OpenMRS family! In fact, this year, 2011 GSoC student Suranga Kasthurirathne was able to join us this October for our annual OpenMRS implementers meeting in Kigali, Rwanda. Suranga provided some excellent feedback about his involvement in GSoC this year, and about his experience meeting the OpenMRS community face to face. Read his blog post for more of his thoughts.
Every year, our Summer of Code application process is extremely competitive. If you’re a university student reading this and thinking about getting invovled with the OpenMRS community, we strongly encourage you to start now. Our Summer of Code wiki pages give some practical tips and advice for anyone interested in getting started with the project. Because we get so many strong applications from talented students, our mentors are interested in seeing your previous work, and if you’ve made steps to get involved with OpenMRS as a developer, we’ll have a better idea of your interests and talents – and if we participate in Summer of Code during 2012, your application will be much stronger.
Once again this year, we were blown away by our amazing students during Google Summer of Code. Thanks to both our students who participated, and our community mentors who gave much of their time and talents to help spread the good work of the OpenMRS community!
This article was written by Michael Downey, Google Summer of Code Program Administrator for OpenMRS, and first published in the OpenMRS Blog. Original post appeared here. It has been reprinted by Open Health News with permission from the author. [RAM]