After Isala and UMCG, the general practitioner (GP) training program joined. They also wanted a way to track the progress of doctors in specialist training. One challenge was that this GP program was offered at seven different universities, each with small differences in their training plans. But Scorion could handle that too.
Then more medical programs followed. From Radboud University (Radboud UMC) to Erasmus MC in Rotterdam, and from UMC Utrecht to Amsterdam UMC. Most medical programs discovered the power of Scorion.
Of course, there was still room for improvement. Processes could be more efficient, and the user interface could be more user-friendly. But this did not change the huge flexibility of Scorion to store every medical activity as a data point. And to support every kind of curriculum, whether it used EPAs, competencies, learning outcomes or qualifications. With Scorion, almost anything is possible.
And then, the first international universities joined. We even made a Chinese version of Scorion. In Sydney, Australia, and also for GPs in South Africa and in Germany, interest in Scorion began to grow.