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#1
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Hi,
Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. Thanks for any help!!! BS |
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#2
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Are the clinicians all in your own organization, and do you have permission
to publish a form to the Organizational Forms library on the Exchange Server? If not, then an Outlook custom form is not a solution for your scenario. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. Thanks for any help!!! BS |
#3
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Yes, the clinicians are in my own organization and I believe I can publish to
the Organizational Forms Library, but I thought I would save the form in my Personal Library, since I am the only one that will be adding some information (the patient's name) and sending it to the clinicians. They will complete their portion by checking off some boxes and maybe some comments and send it back to me. In order to create the forms, I used the "mail" template that was available in one of the libraries. Thanks so much for your quick reply. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: Are the clinicians all in your own organization, and do you have permission to publish a form to the Organizational Forms library on the Exchange Server? If not, then an Outlook custom form is not a solution for your scenario. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. Thanks for any help!!! BS . |
#4
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The clinicians will have no boxes to check unless you can publish the form
to the Organizational Forms library. There is no reason to proceed further with the project until you confirm that prerequisite. Once you do that, you might consider using a reply form, associated with the Reply action on the form design's (Actions) page to collect the information you need from the clinician. Alternatively, design your original form with a separate read layout that collects the information from the clinician and a Submit button to transmit that info to you. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Yes, the clinicians are in my own organization and I believe I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library, but I thought I would save the form in my Personal Library, since I am the only one that will be adding some information (the patient's name) and sending it to the clinicians. They will complete their portion by checking off some boxes and maybe some comments and send it back to me. In order to create the forms, I used the "mail" template that was available in one of the libraries. Thanks so much for your quick reply. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: Are the clinicians all in your own organization, and do you have permission to publish a form to the Organizational Forms library on the Exchange Server? If not, then an Outlook custom form is not a solution for your scenario. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. |
#5
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Hi Sue,
thanks for your reply. Yes, I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library. To start I used the "message" form under the Starndard Forms library, is that correct? (tools - forms - design a form - message). I am now adding fields to the form, is is ok to directly add them or do I need to list them under "field chooser" first? Also, I deleted the split between "edit compose page" and "edit read page." I'm really confused abuot the Actions tab. Clicking it on gives me the following "Action names" Reply, reply to all, forward and reply to folder. I thought there was were I can active a repy to button, but can't seem to figure out how to do that. any suggestions? Thanks for all your help, it is so appreciated!! BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: The clinicians will have no boxes to check unless you can publish the form to the Organizational Forms library. There is no reason to proceed further with the project until you confirm that prerequisite. Once you do that, you might consider using a reply form, associated with the Reply action on the form design's (Actions) page to collect the information you need from the clinician. Alternatively, design your original form with a separate read layout that collects the information from the clinician and a Submit button to transmit that info to you. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Yes, the clinicians are in my own organization and I believe I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library, but I thought I would save the form in my Personal Library, since I am the only one that will be adding some information (the patient's name) and sending it to the clinicians. They will complete their portion by checking off some boxes and maybe some comments and send it back to me. In order to create the forms, I used the "mail" template that was available in one of the libraries. Thanks so much for your quick reply. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: Are the clinicians all in your own organization, and do you have permission to publish a form to the Organizational Forms library on the Exchange Server? If not, then an Outlook custom form is not a solution for your scenario. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. . |
#6
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See comments inline.
-- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "Bluesky" wrote in message ... thanks for your reply. Yes, I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library. To start I used the "message" form under the Starndard Forms library, is that correct? (tools - forms - design a form - message). Yes, if you want to create a custom message form, that's how you start. I am now adding fields to the form, is is ok to directly add them or do I need to list them under "field chooser" first? For a message form, it doesn't matter, but for other types of forms, you should follow the best practices outlined he http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=29 Also, I deleted the split between "edit compose page" and "edit read page." Why? I'm really confused abuot the Actions tab. Clicking it on gives me the following "Action names" Reply, reply to all, forward and reply to folder. I thought there was were I can active a repy to button, but can't seem to figure out how to do that. any suggestions? The item already has a Reply action, which you can modify to have it use a custom form that you've already published. But that may not be as easy to implement as the Submit button approach I suggested earlier. We don't have enough details to choose for you, though, particularly details about what exactly you want to receive from the clinicians. "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: The clinicians will have no boxes to check unless you can publish the form to the Organizational Forms library. There is no reason to proceed further with the project until you confirm that prerequisite. Once you do that, you might consider using a reply form, associated with the Reply action on the form design's (Actions) page to collect the information you need from the clinician. Alternatively, design your original form with a separate read layout that collects the information from the clinician and a Submit button to transmit that info to you. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Yes, the clinicians are in my own organization and I believe I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library, but I thought I would save the form in my Personal Library, since I am the only one that will be adding some information (the patient's name) and sending it to the clinicians. They will complete their portion by checking off some boxes and maybe some comments and send it back to me. In order to create the forms, I used the "mail" template that was available in one of the libraries. Thanks so much for your quick reply. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: Are the clinicians all in your own organization, and do you have permission to publish a form to the Organizational Forms library on the Exchange Server? If not, then an Outlook custom form is not a solution for your scenario. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. . |
#7
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Hi Sue,
thanks for all your help. I guess I really need to play around with it a bit more, but here is a brief outline of what I would like to do: This mail message is to ask clinicians for their permission to contact a patients of theirs for a research study. We were doing this in paper format, having them fill out a form, and then return it to use via inter-office mail, which take a few days. To make it easier for everyone, we thought we would try to design an email message that has the same information as the letter and form they receive, where they can just check off boxes (yes/or no), to whether we may contact their patient, and send it right back to us. So, an email would go to the clinician that explains the study, and has a box for us to put the patient's name. Then we ask the clinician some questions, which they can reply yes or no to, including do they give us permission to contact this patient and a box for comments. Then they would email it back to me and I would be able to print it out, if possible or just save it in a folder in outlook. any suggestions would be appreciated! I guess I like the idea of a submit button, do I need to write code for that? Thanks again for all your help. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: See comments inline. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "Bluesky" wrote in message ... thanks for your reply. Yes, I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library. To start I used the "message" form under the Starndard Forms library, is that correct? (tools - forms - design a form - message). Yes, if you want to create a custom message form, that's how you start. I am now adding fields to the form, is is ok to directly add them or do I need to list them under "field chooser" first? For a message form, it doesn't matter, but for other types of forms, you should follow the best practices outlined he http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=29 Also, I deleted the split between "edit compose page" and "edit read page." Why? I'm really confused abuot the Actions tab. Clicking it on gives me the following "Action names" Reply, reply to all, forward and reply to folder. I thought there was were I can active a repy to button, but can't seem to figure out how to do that. any suggestions? The item already has a Reply action, which you can modify to have it use a custom form that you've already published. But that may not be as easy to implement as the Submit button approach I suggested earlier. We don't have enough details to choose for you, though, particularly details about what exactly you want to receive from the clinicians. "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: The clinicians will have no boxes to check unless you can publish the form to the Organizational Forms library. There is no reason to proceed further with the project until you confirm that prerequisite. Once you do that, you might consider using a reply form, associated with the Reply action on the form design's (Actions) page to collect the information you need from the clinician. Alternatively, design your original form with a separate read layout that collects the information from the clinician and a Submit button to transmit that info to you. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Yes, the clinicians are in my own organization and I believe I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library, but I thought I would save the form in my Personal Library, since I am the only one that will be adding some information (the patient's name) and sending it to the clinicians. They will complete their portion by checking off some boxes and maybe some comments and send it back to me. In order to create the forms, I used the "mail" template that was available in one of the libraries. Thanks so much for your quick reply. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: Are the clinicians all in your own organization, and do you have permission to publish a form to the Organizational Forms library on the Exchange Server? If not, then an Outlook custom form is not a solution for your scenario. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. . . |
#8
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Again, without knowing exactly what you want mailed back to you -- data in a
custom form or an email message with all the necessary information in the message body -- it's impossible to suggest the best solution. However, either one will probably require some coding either for the Reply event or a submit button. You might indeed want to play around with both. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming: Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54 "Bluesky" wrote in message ... thanks for all your help. I guess I really need to play around with it a bit more, but here is a brief outline of what I would like to do: This mail message is to ask clinicians for their permission to contact a patients of theirs for a research study. We were doing this in paper format, having them fill out a form, and then return it to use via inter-office mail, which take a few days. To make it easier for everyone, we thought we would try to design an message that has the same information as the letter and form they receive, where they can just check off boxes (yes/or no), to whether we may contact their patient, and send it right back to us. So, an email would go to the clinician that explains the study, and has a box for us to put the patient's name. Then we ask the clinician some questions, which they can reply yes or no to, including do they give us permission to contact this patient and a box for comments. Then they would email it back to me and I would be able to print it out, if possible or just save it in a folder in outlook. any suggestions would be appreciated! I guess I like the idea of a submit button, do I need to write code for that? Thanks again for all your help. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: See comments inline. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... thanks for your reply. Yes, I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library. To start I used the "message" form under the Starndard Forms library, is that correct? (tools - forms - design a form - message). Yes, if you want to create a custom message form, that's how you start. I am now adding fields to the form, is is ok to directly add them or do I need to list them under "field chooser" first? For a message form, it doesn't matter, but for other types of forms, you should follow the best practices outlined he http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=29 Also, I deleted the split between "edit compose page" and "edit read page." Why? I'm really confused abuot the Actions tab. Clicking it on gives me the following "Action names" Reply, reply to all, forward and reply to folder. I thought there was were I can active a repy to button, but can't seem to figure out how to do that. any suggestions? The item already has a Reply action, which you can modify to have it use a custom form that you've already published. But that may not be as easy to implement as the Submit button approach I suggested earlier. We don't have enough details to choose for you, though, particularly details about what exactly you want to receive from the clinicians. "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: The clinicians will have no boxes to check unless you can publish the form to the Organizational Forms library. There is no reason to proceed further with the project until you confirm that prerequisite. Once you do that, you might consider using a reply form, associated with the Reply action on the form design's (Actions) page to collect the information you need from the clinician. Alternatively, design your original form with a separate read layout that collects the information from the clinician and a Submit button to transmit that info to you. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Yes, the clinicians are in my own organization and I believe I can publish to the Organizational Forms Library, but I thought I would save the form in my Personal Library, since I am the only one that will be adding some information (the patient's name) and sending it to the clinicians. They will complete their portion by checking off some boxes and maybe some comments and send it back to me. In order to create the forms, I used the "mail" template that was available in one of the libraries. Thanks so much for your quick reply. BS "Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote: Are the clinicians all in your own organization, and do you have permission to publish a form to the Organizational Forms library on the Exchange Server? If not, then an Outlook custom form is not a solution for your scenario. "Bluesky" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope you can help. I created a mail message form that we be sent to several clinicians at different times requestiong permission to contact a patient of their's. I belive I understand the design of the form somewhat. But here are my questions: I will keep the form in my personal library and add patient specific information, like patient name for earch clinician. I will put this in a text box. When the clinician opens the email he/she will fill it out...but how will they send it back to me? Hitting reply doesn't seem to work, b/c then they have to fill in my name. Is there any good way to do this, maybe a submit button and it comes back to me. Or a reply to button, but then the form seems to disappear. So, basically I need to send the form to a clinician, have them fill it out and send it back to me. I having trouble configuring the mail to do this. . . |
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