Managing Your Practice

Putting the Web to Use in Practice


 

I am a strong believer in using the resources we have so readily at hand to inform ourselves of the latest medical information and guidelines and to inform our patients. Every exam room in our practice is wired with access to the Web and I refer to it during nearly every patient visit. Here's a quick look at sites that I'm currently using:

Social Bookmarking: With the explosion of social networking sites in the past year, there has been a corresponding increase in sites, such as delicious.com

Patient Education: If a patient needs information, I turn to sites vetted by government agencies or medical organizations such as the American Academy of Family Physicians. The AAFP's site, www.familydoctor.org

The National Library of Medicine (http://medlineplus.gov

The Mayo Clinic's site (www.mayoclinic.com

Despite the fact that 54% of our residency program clinic patients are on Medicaid, a large number have access to a computer to look at these sites.

Physician Education: When I'm searching for information for my own purposes, I use the same rule of thumb: Well-worn paths are best. When I'm looking for a high-level overview or when I can't remember a specific fact, I'll go to www.fpnotebook.comwww.emedicine.com

Through our hospital and residency program affiliate, I have access to www.uptodate.com

The 600-pound gorilla for drug information, of course, is www.epocrates.com

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's electronic Preventive Services Selector (www.epss.ahrq.gov

For guidelines on any topic, go to www.guidelines.govwww.nhlbi.gov

To some degree I worry about physicians who aren't checking Web resources. As Dr. Larry Weed, the pioneer visionary of the information age in health care, once suggested: If you want to go on a trip, you don't go to a travel agent who has memorized all of the flight boarding times, you go to someone who knows how to utilize resources to pick the best trip for you.

Our memory of what we learned in medical school is imperfect. And what was true back then, has probably changed.

Recommended Reading

Psychiatric Illness Associated With Nonadherence to Antiepileptics
MDedge Psychiatry
Guanfacine Gets the Nod as Once-Daily Therapy for ADHD
MDedge Psychiatry
Teens, Parents OK Psychiatric Screening in ED
MDedge Psychiatry
Failed Alzheimer's Trials Shift Focus to Prevention
MDedge Psychiatry
Smoking Cessation Strategies Now Numerous : Try nicotine replacement therapy plus bupropion or high-dose NRT plus nicotine gum or lozenges.
MDedge Psychiatry
Rasagiline May Slow Progression of Parkinson's
MDedge Psychiatry
Anxiety and Depression Prevail After 'Coiling'
MDedge Psychiatry
Onset of Memory Loss in Alzheimer's Tied to APOE Status
MDedge Psychiatry
Discussing CAM options with your patients
MDedge Psychiatry
World Mental Health Day: Preventing suicide
MDedge Psychiatry