Company History
In 1998 a team of IT and Health Information Specialists from
New Zealand and other countries, met in Dubai. After reviewing
the strengths and weaknesses of currently available health
information systems the team recognized the need and resolved
to build a new system.
The objective was to utilize the very latest development tools
to build the most advanced and technologically innovative health information system;
rich in functionality and reasonable in price.
Development started in late 1998 by Phoenix Health systems in Jeddah,
K.S.A lead by Mr. Ian Bailey, a New Zealander with more than
30 years experience in hospital management and IT and Mrs.
Liza Bacolod (Development Manager). The development
of financial modules was done in Dubai by MAS Technology
lead by Mr. Mohan Attavar. The company has development
centres in New Zealand and India.
Overview
The implementation plan for the Phoenix Hospital Information and Management System is custom tailored to meet each hospitals unique requirements. We are however, committed to follow through on one principle that remains the same for all clients. That is, "results must exceed client expectations". Al Anaiah is committed to remaining on site until the results exceeds expectations. Al Anaiah is committed to providing highly professional training as well as a level of ongoing service and support that will exceed your expectations.
Software Architecture
- The Phoenix Hospital Information and Management System is built for both client-server and web-based architecture.
- It is a totally open solution designed for hardware independence and for RDBMS independence.
- Phoenix Hospital Information and Management System will be demonstrated as follows:
- Operating System: At least Windows Server 2003
- Operating System: Windows Server 2008 or Redhat (RHEL) 5 for the web-based architecture
- RDBMS: Oracle 11g
Several different features working in combination (including the power of Oracle Database System) help to provide an excellent security and access control system. The result is the facility to grant or restrict access for individual users or groups of users, to specific modules, specific functions within modules or even down to the "button" level within functions.

