Published
I am not a student, but I find my PDA to be a tool I use each and every day. I have an iPod and it does a great job for audio (listening and recording), but my PDA helps with reading material, study guides, drug guides, flash cards, and non-nursing things (calendar, work-out tracker, address book...) Get one now and learn to use it. You will find many applications (free and pay) in the PDA forum. Check that out--better than the TX forum for learning about PDAs.
You don't use it to store personal info about the patient - you use it to store your drug ref book, your lab manual and other references on.
From a standpoint of home health however or say NP or MD - you would probably carry some patient info around on it - but it's either carry it around on that and be able to password protect it, or carry it around on paper...
You don't use it to store personal info about the patient - you use it to store your drug ref book, your lab manual and other references on.From a standpoint of home health however or say NP or MD - you would probably carry some patient info around on it - but it's either carry it around on that and be able to password protect it, or carry it around on paper...
oh i see...:smackingf
i was just visualizing someone doing charts in the palm of their hand...
...just ignore me!
I've had my Ipaq since before I started clinicals. Some of the reactions from fellow students and teachers were quite interesting. A few actually seemed resentful, but many wanted to know where they could get one. Interestingly, I've actually had more teachers ask about it than students. One of my "old school" teachers was rather rude to me about it and made the comment "we should use the brain God gave us" .... egad! I have no doubt that I'd rather have references at my fingertips than go into a patient care situation clueless. The doctors are using them; why not nurses?? Current, concise, and readily available information has been a godsend during clinicals.
I have 3 drug guides, some medical references, Merck Manual, lab manuals, Harrison's, Stedman's, some care plan stuff, DSM-IV-TR, etc... I'll also say that I've easily learned as much from those references as I learned in class. Oh... FYI: Here's a link to probably the most useful medical guide I've found (and that I actually paid good $$$ for).
http://www.pocketgear.com/software_detail.asp?id=17445
OR download it from the author/editor for $10 less: http://www.clinicalmedconsult.com/
May 18th is the eagerly anticipated graduation day here... woohooooo! :monkeydance:
ree-nee
114 Posts
I wasnt sure if most of you are news hounds like I am but I noticed this article on the from page of Yahoo! and I thought some would be interested in reading it....Im still debating whether I should get one. I know UT-H podcasts some lectures and I have an iPod for that but Im still on the fence about the PDA. Any of you have any comments either way or experience with a PDA in school?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060416/ap_on_he_me/apn_medical_pdas_2