Open Path is now a Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) platform! CoCs have been using Open Path for HUD reporting and homeless data management since 2016, and as a complete HMIS system for service provider records and case management since 2023. As more communities adopt Open Path as their HMIS, however, we thought it was time for an official announcement. The Platform… Open Path is a full-featured HMIS. Developed with a highly intentional focus on usability, our goal is to make routine tasks easy, and complex operations intuitive. Grounded in Federal HUD data requirements, the system facilitates maintaining data quality and delivers mandatory reports. Yet it also provides intrinsic extensibility, giving organizations the ability to create and maintain their own data tools — assessments, service records, reports, and more — to support all kinds of local requirements, initiatives, and innovations. Open Path is also, of course, a homeless data integration platform. At its heart is still the HMIS data 'Warehouse,' with sturdy functionality for merging multiple data sets from multiple external systems to support analysis, record-sharing initiatives, and integrated service delivery. …And How It Came to Be Green River has a deep and authentic mission to enable social impact. HUD-required HMIS is about compliance and reporting — but it should also be a tool for helping people secure a stable home. Green River is an HMIS vendor, yes, but we also set out to be true partners with the organizations we serve. Open Path originally began as a custom homeless data warehouse for the City of Boston; HMIS functionality first came about in partnership with Allegheny County, PA; and many, many features and components across the system have been created (and improved and maintained) in partnership with many organizations nationwide. Our goal is to create a solution that takes that shared investment and delivers shared value — system tools, innovations, processes — to enable real impact. https://lnkd.in/eBzNwpfE
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Exciting news from Green River! Open Path is officially a full-featured Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) platform. This innovative system, built on years of partnership and purpose-driven development, is transforming how communities manage homeless data, ensuring compliance, enhancing usability, and empowering organizations to meet local needs with tailored tools and features. Proud to be part of a team with a mission to drive real social impact. Together, we're creating solutions that go beyond data — helping people find stability and a place to call home.
Open Path is now a Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) platform! CoCs have been using Open Path for HUD reporting and homeless data management since 2016, and as a complete HMIS system for service provider records and case management since 2023. As more communities adopt Open Path as their HMIS, however, we thought it was time for an official announcement. The Platform… Open Path is a full-featured HMIS. Developed with a highly intentional focus on usability, our goal is to make routine tasks easy, and complex operations intuitive. Grounded in Federal HUD data requirements, the system facilitates maintaining data quality and delivers mandatory reports. Yet it also provides intrinsic extensibility, giving organizations the ability to create and maintain their own data tools — assessments, service records, reports, and more — to support all kinds of local requirements, initiatives, and innovations. Open Path is also, of course, a homeless data integration platform. At its heart is still the HMIS data 'Warehouse,' with sturdy functionality for merging multiple data sets from multiple external systems to support analysis, record-sharing initiatives, and integrated service delivery. …And How It Came to Be Green River has a deep and authentic mission to enable social impact. HUD-required HMIS is about compliance and reporting — but it should also be a tool for helping people secure a stable home. Green River is an HMIS vendor, yes, but we also set out to be true partners with the organizations we serve. Open Path originally began as a custom homeless data warehouse for the City of Boston; HMIS functionality first came about in partnership with Allegheny County, PA; and many, many features and components across the system have been created (and improved and maintained) in partnership with many organizations nationwide. Our goal is to create a solution that takes that shared investment and delivers shared value — system tools, innovations, processes — to enable real impact. https://lnkd.in/eBzNwpfE
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Updated SNAPS Data TA Strategy to Improve Data and Performance - HUD Exchange: Data Quality: The degree to which data in HMIS is complete, timely, accurate, and consistent; Data Utilization: The ability for CoCs to leverage ...
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Don't let tiresome data tasks eat away all your time! With GiveCentral, say goodbye to repetitive data entry and hello to real-time updates, simplified database management, and enhanced engagement strategies. Let us handle the details while you focus on your mission. #TimeSaver #EfficientDataManagement #StreamlinedUpdates #EngagementBoost #DataTasksMadeEasy #ProductivityBoost #AutomatedDataEntry #SimplifiedDatabase #MissionFocused #DataManagementSolutions
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Keep up to date: The perils of fragmented data systems #buildinginformationmodelling #BuildingSafetyAct #datacentre
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#socialhousing providers are sitting on large quantities of data which are not routinely analysed and the findings used to improve the business. And EDI data is no different. In this timely session for DIN members Clare Paterson a data strategist and EDI champion will help you understand and maximise the potential of your EDI data and unlock the benefits across the business. #housingassociations #housingdata #housinginnovation
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Only the perfect tool will give you that: ✅ Real-time insights that catch problems before they spiral ✅ Analytics to fine-tune your database performance ✅Confidence to know your system is running at its best #Database #Performance #CIO #Monitoring #DBA
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My method accepted two parameters: title (a string representing the notification title) and message (a string representing the notification content). I retrieved the current tenant ID using _tenantUow.GetCurrentTenant().Id. That suggested that my application was likely a multi-tenant system, where each tenant had it was own data. The tenantId variable held value. Created a new Notification object with the provided title and message. The Notification class likely contained additional properties (not shown here) to store other relevant information about the notification. I added the newly created notification to the repository using _notificationRepository.AddAsync(notification). That implied that notifications were being stored in some form of data store (e.g., a database). I called _tenantUow.SaveChangesAsync() to persist any changes made to the data context. The variable changed holds the number of affected records after saving changes. If there were changes (i.e., changes > 0), used SignalR (presumably _https://lnkd.in/gXxP8hfZ(tenantId).ReceiveNotification(notification.ToDto())) to send the notification to clients connected to the specified tenant group. I ensured real-time updates for subscribed clients.
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Delighted to showcase my Hospital Information Management System project, which leverages SQL for robust data analysis and management. This project highlights the importance of efficient information systems in healthcare. #SQL #HIMS #TechInHealthcare #DataAnalysis
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