Title: PDAs in the Health Sciences
1PDAs in the Health Sciences
Megan Fox Web Electronic Resources Librarian
fox_at_simmons.edu
JumpStart May 22, 2002
2PDAs will be as common as the stethoscope in
medicine in the future. Bob Trelease, UCLA Sc
hool of Medicine
3http//www.cbil.vcu.edu/mac/events/2001/mclendon.p
pt
4Quality of Care driving the market
- Contributing to medical mistakes are
- poor physician handwriting
- prescription errors due to wrong dosages or
missing known drug allergies
- omitting an important treatment step
- inability to locate a chart
- lack of proper follow-up
Source National Institute of Medicine,
November 1999
5Physician PDA usage
- General use 15 1999, 26 2001
- Physicians under 45 33
- Physicians over 45 21
- Hospital based 33
- Office based 23
- Half of all docs will use by 2004-2005
Source HarrisInteractive Computing in the
Physicians Practice, Health Care News, August
15, 2001, page 1-2.
February, 2000 A survey at Mount Sinai Dept. of
Internal Medicine showed 60 attendings and 47
residents owned PDAs.
6- What are PDAs and handheld computers?
- Why use a PDA?
- What are PDAs most commonly used for?
Refer to this mornings presentation, PD What?
Available at http//web.simmons.edu/fox/PDA.html
7Why use a PDA?
- Mobility (On-the-go, 24/7 access, small, light)
- Â Â Simplicity (Ease of use and understanding)
- Â Â Versatility (Able to meet a variety of changing
needs)
- Â Â Functionality (Extensive applications)
- Easy interconnectivity (beam and sync to other
users, desktop, network)
- Â Â Organization (coordinates and consolidates
schedules, tasks)
- Â Â Low Cost (Extremely cost-effective relative to
other forms of computer technology)
8Why PDAs in Health Care?
PDA is mobile PDA is light (average 8 oz) PD
A has longer battery life average 8 hrs
PC tethered Laptops heavy and cumbersome (avera
ge 7 lbs)
Laptop battery average 3 hrs
9Most Common PDA Applications
- Calendar/Date Book
- Keep daily reminders and appointments
- Set alarms with explanations attached
- Address Book/Phone Book
- Memos/Notes
- To do/Lists
10Health Care Applications
- Reference materials (journal summaries,
mini-texts, etc Abbreviations, dictionaries,
diagnosis, lab values, guidelines, protocols
Drug Guides (ePocrates downloaded by 80,000
physicians by 2000) - Medical calculators
- Patient records/management
- Prescription writing
- Coding/billing
11Reference Material
Core drug handbooks and reference materials
updated more frequently that the print version
readily accessible all-in-one, searchable.
- Merck Manual
- Harrisons
- 5 Minute Consults
- Physicians Desk Reference
- Davis Drug Guides
- ePocrates
12Ebooks especially health textbooks and
reference books
http//nnlm.gov/gmr/newsletter/1/pdalist.pdf
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17ePocrates
- Access complete information on over 400 bugs and
400 drugs
- Search by location, bug, or drug
- Launch instantly from qID to qRx 4.0 and back for
more comprehensive drug detail
18ePocrates
- Adult and Peds Dosing
- Adverse Reactions
- Contraindications
- Drug Interactions
- Mechanism of Action
- Package and Pricing Info
- Pregnancy/Lactation
19ePocrates
20Specialty Medical Calculators
Software designed and produced by clinicians
practical, frequently needed information and
calculations. Equations, conversions. Rapid,
reduces human error.
- MedCalc Freeware medical calculator sorted by
category contains over 60 formulas
- PregCalc
- MedMath
21MedCalc
22Medical Calculators
23Medical News
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25Electronic journals and Table of Contents
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28Patient Management
- Reduce duplicate paperwork in the field, and
transferred back at the office less repetition
More accurate More organized
- PocketChart
- PocketMD
- HanDbase
- PatientKeeper
- Patient Tracker
- WardWatch
29Patient Management
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32Prescription Writing
- iScribe prescription writing coding reference
tool
- ePhysician
- AllScripts
33E-prescribing
- Western Journal of Medicine, Volume 172, Feb 2000
34E-prescribing
- Computerized order entry has repeatedly been
shown to reduce prescription errors
- Point-of-care convenience for physician order
entry is making e-prescriptions a viable and
growing business
35eMD2
36Putting it together
37PDA Projects in Academia
38- Medical Schools That Require Handhelds
- Wake Forest
- University of S. Florida
- University of S. Dakota
- Harvard
- East Carolina University
- UNC Chapel Hill
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40University of North Carolina Health Sciences
Library
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42http//www.library.vcu.edu/tml/bibs/pdabibliograph
y.html
43Syncing Stations
44Specific Library guides/how-to/instruction
resources
Duke University Medical Center Library
45Challenges
- Privacy/security - Patient confidentiality
- HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996) and PHI (Protected
Health Information)
- Many of these resources are free whats the
business model? Could the ultimate goal be to
seek information to drug companies? How are/will
they make money? - The IT view of PDAs Who owns it, who maintains it
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47Future
- Compatibility
- Convergence
48Presentation and links available
athttp//web.simmons.edu/fox/PDA.ppt
Megan Fox Web Electronic Resources Librarian
Simmons College fox_at_simmons.edu Jump Start,
May 22, 2002