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I have a pda and use it frequently at work. I get ALOT of comment about being a gadget queen or techie nurse. It's funny because whenever anyone has a drug question they always come to me and ask for help. wanted to know if anyone else has been using their handheld for drug calculations and such. I highly recommend it.
thanks
kim
wow thats an extensive list. does it take a long time for the apps to load, considering most of the apps are loaded in the card? i have isilo in my palm and it takes forever to read the memory card. it would be nice to have all these information handy but i usually lose my patience b4 the app gets loaded. =P
I love my PDA and can not imagine working a day without it! I have not been happy with most of the free programs and have just sucked it up and paid for some. I use Davis Drug Guide, Tabers Medical Dictionary, and 5 Min Clinical Consult. The 5 Min Clinical Consult is especially nice if you need to look up some rare disease you've never heard of or float to an area that you are not familiar with. It will give a good description of diseases, treatment, medications, labs, etc. I do not go a single shift without refering to it at least once (especially for drugs) and love having piles of textbooks in my pocket. Sometimes get strange looks when I pull it out, but it saves me time searching through outdated and sometimes hard to find references.
wow thats an extensive list. does it take a long time for the apps to load, considering most of the apps are loaded in the card? i have isilo in my palm and it takes forever to read the memory card. it would be nice to have all these information handy but i usually lose my patience b4 the app gets loaded. =P
I have a Palm Tungsten C which has a very fast processor. My largest iSilo file (Clinical Medicine Consult - 8MB) takes about 1.5 seconds to load from the card. MY largest non-iSilo apps take usually less time to load from the card.
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258 Posts
Most reports on the new T5 are not very good. Crashes, hard resets and a memory issue that makes you think you are getting a lot but really you are not. The way it was explained to be is the memory on the T5 is divided into 512 byte chunks so if an application needed less than 512 bytes (which is a lot of the supporting components to many applications) then it would still use up 512 bytes and the memory gets eaten up very quickly. Same on the new Treo 650.
I have the Tungsten C with a 128mb expansion ca5rd with the following applications that really help in the ED and on ACNP clinicals:
ACNP Category
ICD-9 and CPT Codes
Yesterday (keeps track of assignments and grades for my grad courses)
Calculator Category
ABG Pro
Appraising and Applying Evidence
C-Spine Rules
HaemOnc Rules
ICU Math
MedCalc
MedRules
Mini Mental Status Exam
Pregnancy Wheel
Cardiology Category
5 Minute Cardiology Consult
A-Fib Stroke Risk Calculaotr
ACC Guidelines and Clinical Trials Database
CardioMath Calculator
TIMI Risk Calculator
Communication Category
Cloak (secure password keeper)
Documents To Go (carry my PowerPoint presentations to practice)
JFile 5
Wordsmith (converts Word docs to Palm readable file, have created over 500
memos regarding emergency medicine tips and hospital policies)
Drugs Category
Johns Hopkins Antibiotic Guide
BioChem Disaster management
Davis Drug Guide with Integrated Calculator
Epocrates (Rx, Dx, ID, Lab, Tables and more)
Infusicalc
Medical Category
Code Blue
COPD Gold
DxSaurus
Emergency Airway management
ER Suite 5.0
HandBase (allows me to create data collection tools)
iSilo (reader program, convert medical web pages to palm readable format, have about 200 medical based references here)
Midnight Medicine
Unbound Surgery
Ortho Category
Bones
Handbook of Fractures
Pediatrics Category
5 Minute Pediatric Consult
CQ peds
Growth Charts
Harriet lane
Hyperbili
Riley Kidomeeter
Shots 2004
Tarascon Pediatric Emergency Pocketbook
Radiology Category
Pocket Radiologist
Medical Imaging Guidebook
Reference Category
2005 Currents
Clinical Evidence
Eponyms
Geriatrics
Guides to Lab and Diagnostic tests
Merck Journal Scan (weekly and monthly updates from up to 200+ medical/nursing journals)
Tabers