Registry-grade healthcare software across multiple institutions and GCC countries.
Gulf Coast Registry is a regional registry tracking Acute Coronary Syndrome cases across Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and the UAE. The product goal was to build a unified digital system that standardizes patient data, improves accuracy, and supports real-time clinical research across 38 hospitals.
Why this case matters
This story carries a different kind of proof from the more patient-facing cases. It is less about one workflow and more about whether SanoWorks can support a registry where data accuracy, cross-hospital consistency, and real-time clinical research all have to work together.
Clinical data systems need trust in the structure, not just the screens.
Registry and eClinical software tends to look deceptively straightforward from the outside. In reality, the hard part is almost always structural: workflow consistency, validation logic, data quality, multi-site onboarding, and alignment between how different institutions record and use information. Gulf Coast Registry matters because it shows SanoWorks operating in exactly that kind of environment through a prospective ACS registry spanning Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and the UAE.
The source brief makes the purpose explicit. This was about building one digital system that could standardize patient data, improve accuracy, and support real-time clinical research instead of leaving those functions fragmented across institutions. That framing matters because it makes the work look like healthcare operating infrastructure, not generic software delivery.
The metrics help explain why the proof is strong. Thirty-eight hospitals suggests real variation in how the system had to function. Four GCC countries makes the regional story credible, not decorative. More than 200 physicians using the platform suggests operational trust among clinical stakeholders. The source system snapshot also shows a 4000-patient sample size, which adds another useful scale signal. For founders building registries, eClinical tools, or structured healthcare data systems, this case reduces one important uncertainty: can this team handle software where consistency and correctness matter as much as experience design. Gulf Coast suggests yes.
SanoWorks can support healthcare software where workflow rigor and data quality are the real product.
If your roadmap involves registries, hospital networks, quality programs, or regionally scaled clinical systems, Gulf Coast Registry is likely the closest proof pattern on the site.