2. Handheld computers for
informationists
●
Introductions
●
Mobile computers
●
Individual usage
●
Team usage
●
NIH issues
– NIH HUG resources
– Blackberry
– offline vs online
●
Q&A
3. What is a mobile computer?
●
Ultramobile
– Handheld computer
– Smartphone
●
Advantages
– portable
– battery life
– always on
– easy sharing
●
Recommend Palm or Pocket PC
4. Why it is here to stay
●
Handheld computers become smartphones, and
every clinician is already carrying a phone
– Aziz et al (PMID 16109177) gave smartphones to
surgeons and improved responsiveness to nurses
●
No charge left behind
– Moulton et al (PMID 16385275) gave handheld
computers to trauma surgeons and increases
charge capture
5. Personal information
●
Simple organizer software can make a big
difference
●
Teach the advantages of
– synchronization with secretary’s PC
– beaming to colleagues
– the more they write the more they retrieve
6. Evidence-based medicine
●
Most references are equivalent, so recommend
the NIH-HUG resources
– MD Consult:
●
create a personal account then a POCKETConsult account
●
mainly news but also drug reference
– Facts and Comparisons
●
AtoZ Drug Facts offline
– Natural Standard
●
evidence-based information about complementary and
alternative therapies.
– MICROMEDEX
7.
8.
9. Local knowledge
●
Using local reference information is a big and
important part of daily workflow
●
Source: Word, PDF, HTML
●
Read: RepliGo, Plucker
●
Great teams beam great amounts
10. Blackberry devices
●
HHS mandate but can get round this
●
Great for communication and / or bureaucracy
●
Limited clinical usage including clinical
software, PDFs, web pages and beaming
11. Online vs offline
●
WiFi is desirable but
NIH CIT makes it too
difficult
●
Even when online,
webpages are often
ill-suited for small
screens
●
So offline is default
workflow
12. Q&A
●
Mohammad Al-Ubaydli me@mo.md
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Copies of the presentation are available at
www.handheldsfordoctors.com