Radar 10 was plain at first glance: symptom entry fields, remedy databases, repertory indexes, and a modular patient chart system. But its strength lay in the way it listened. Mira typed in the patient's name — Jacob — then began entering his symptoms: tearing eyes that flared when wind hit his face, an obsession with straight lines, sleep broken by dreams of falling from ladders. Radar 10’s interface suggested rubrics as she typed, drawing from an expansive repertory indexed down to tiny behavioral quirks. Each suggested rubric came with cross-references, clinical tips, and citations from classic materia medica. The software didn’t make decisions for her; it simply gathered the echoes of the case and laid them out like constellations.
Have you used Radar 10 in your practice? Share your favorite feature or tip in the comments below. Radar 10 Homeopathic Software For Windows Radaropus
: While official updates for Radar 10 ended in 2023, users were historically offered paths to import their Radar 10 libraries into the new RadarOpus system to preserve their data. Mastering Homeopathic Practice: The Ultimate Guide to Radar
RadarOpus uses a tabbed layout similar to a web browser, making it easy to toggle between different tasks. RadarOpus uses a tabbed layout similar to a
Generate beautiful, professional case reports, remedy differentials, and patient handouts. Print them or save as PDF. You can also export repertory charts to CSV for advanced statistical analysis.
You can import your old Radar 10 single case files or catalogs directly into the RadarOpus database using the "Import analysis from other program" button.