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Conclusion

Sillah is now a completed academic project that documents the full requirements engineering lifecycle for a preventive family health management system focused on hereditary cardiac risk awareness in Saudi families.

Final Project Outcome

  • All 6 requirements lifecycle phases were completed across the project documentation: inception, elicitation, analysis, specification, validation, and requirements management.
  • The final baseline covers 3 core stakeholder groups: families, healthcare providers, and administrators.
  • The analyzed system scope was consolidated into 30 functional requirements, organized across 6 core features and supported by 17+ non-functional and operational constraints.
  • The report set is complete with 3 finalized written phase reports plus the integrated presentation and supporting documentation pages.

What The Project Delivered

  • A traceable, prevention-focused requirements package aligned with the original Sillah vision.
  • A clearly prioritized release scope centered on secure access, family member management, health event tracking, and rule-based risk alerts.
  • A documented prototype story supported by patient and doctor portal screens, dashboard views, alerts, and appointment-related workflows.
  • A strong foundation for future expansion into real healthcare integration, advanced analytics, and broader preventive-health services.

Closing Statement

Overall, the Sillah project successfully moved from concept to a complete, well-structured final deliverable. The finished documentation and prototype evidence show that the system is not only technically and academically complete, but also aligned with its core purpose of helping families detect hereditary risk earlier and act more proactively.