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I work in a home health setting and I'm fairly new grad and often find myself in need of backup drug book or other references. My favorite reference book is Manual of Nursing by Lippicott, a huge awsome book. I heard you can download it on your I pod. Also I dont understand why is it unprofessional to use it at front of the patient. I personally would be happy if my nurse would double check some info before presenting to me (even if she did it at front of me). Really that would show me that she actually is accountable and doesnt want to make mistake.Do patient really expect nurses to know all the drugs in the world?? This is crazy at best..especially considering all of those drug combo they have now like diuretics combined with angiotensins (hyzaar) etc... How the heck I suppose to rember the difference between Coozar and Hyzaar? Or distinguish plain lipitor from Caduet.
I commend you for realizing there is a new resource out there that can really help nursing. I have both a touch and phone and love them both. I have various applications on both. Medscape and Epocrates both offer free drug guides that are usually updated monthly so you are getting more accurate information than in a printed drug guide.
In home health, some assessment programs may benefit you. 5 minute clinical consults are nice, skyscape as someone else mentioned has lots to offer. There are many apps to choose from.
A word of caution: the iPod is wi fi capable which makes it a little limiting. If you don't have a wifi signal, you can't get online away from home. At home, you sync with your computer to update. It's not a huge deal, as many places now offer free wi fi. Just wanted to mention it.
I prefer my droid but agree that smartphones offer great resources! We do have a policy that they can't be used in patient areas or the nurses desk but I work nights so I tend to bend that rule. I don't do it in front of patient's but only because of the rule, not because I don't think it's worth explaining. There are meds we give that aren't always in our medbooks and while the pharmacy is a great resource they rely on the same resources we do for info on new meds! I wish we had internet access on our work computers, even if it was only to medical info sites the hospital approved.
To the OP, I agree, however we know you and I will use it for work purposes however someone always spoils it for others by going on to facebook.
But she works in home health. Of course it depends on the family, but I always brought a book (usually Stephen King) or watched TV. One of my cases let us use the computer - this was before facebook, but I got really good at Collapse and BeSpelled :)
itsmejuli
2,188 Posts
I just replaced my iPod with an iPhone :) Have lots of nursing apps that I wouldn't be without.