Medical Libraries secion 1 PDA Resources PDA Resources DOHMS Continuing Education Department Medical Libraries.

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Presentation transcript:

Medical Libraries secion 1 PDA Resources PDA Resources DOHMS Continuing Education Department Medical Libraries Section By: Bakheet Beshtawy Systems Librarian Website: “PDAs will be as common as the stethoscope in medicine in the future.” Bob Trelease

Medical Libraries secion 2 Definitions: What is a PDA? Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) are pocket-sized computers that can be used to store and access information Remarkable, tiny, fully functional computer that you can hold in one hand Handheld computers that originally were designed as personal organizers, and they do this really well

Medical Libraries secion 3 Terminology: Handheld Hand computer PDA Wireless computer Palm PocketPC iPAQ, i-mate, hp, trio, smartphone PocketPC

Medical Libraries secion 4 PDA Parts: Microprocessor Operating system Solid-state memory Batteries LCD display Input device - buttons in combination with touch- screen or keyboard Input/output ports Desktop PC software

Medical Libraries secion 5 PDA Types: Operating System PocketPc (Windows CE) Handhelds made by Acer, Audiovox, Casio, Dell, HP, Compaq, Mexmal, NEC, Siemens and Toshiba Palm OS Handhelds made by Acer, AlphaSmart, Handera, Handspring, Kyocera, Palm, Samsung, Sony and Symbol.

Medical Libraries secion 6 PDA Types: Operating Systems EPOC operating system from Symbian which is a joint venture between Psion, Nokia, Ericsson and Motorola. Most popular in Europe to handle mobile communications.

Medical Libraries secion 7 Palm and PocketPC: PalmPocketPc CheaperMore expensive Smaller/lighterBulky Longer batteryLow battery More resourcesLess resources (Growing rapidly) Simple to useMore complex Less memory (8-32MB)Large memory (32-128MB) Slower (33MHz)Faster (>200MHz Not multitaskRun multiple-tasks

Medical Libraries secion 8 To buy a PDA: Five major issues to consider. Memory Input Screen quality Connectivity Size

Medical Libraries secion 9 Connectivity: Each device has a cable that can share information with PCs. This sharing is called synchronisation. Information can also be shared between handheld computers. This sharing is called beaming. Infrared (IR) Bluetooth Wireless Network***

Medical Libraries secion 10 Beaming Source:

Medical Libraries secion 11 PDAs disadvantages: Confidentiality Security of data: ensuring security of your patients' data is vital and requires some effort Misplaced or lost Needs budget to buy software, textbooks, and hardware expansions

Medical Libraries secion 12 What applications do they put on their PDA ’ s? Personal use and time management Patient tracking Billing and Coding systems Prescription writing Medical references (Books, Journals, News..) Drug information Medical calculators EBM - Clinical guidelines Differential Diagnosis Access to Medical Literature Medline Web Access, Word processing (Office Word, Excel, …)

Medical Libraries secion 13

Medical Libraries secion 14 Why use a PDA? (General ) Mobility (On-the-go, 24/7 access, small, light) Simplicity (Ease of use and understanding) Flexibility (Able to meet a variety of changing needs) Functionality (Extensive applications) Easy interconnectivity (beam and sync to other users, desktop, network) Organization (coordinates and consolidates schedules, tasks) Low Cost: relative to other forms of computers

Medical Libraries secion 15 Why use a PDA? (Medicine) New connections between medical knowledge and patient care Excellent tools for managing clinical information and accessing it at the point of care Handheld computers are suited to clinical practice because they are small, affordable, and easy to use; can read handwriting; and have a long battery life * They can run a wide range of medical software The devices support clinical teamwork by making it easy to share information with other clinicians' PCs and handheld computers *Al-Ubaydli M, BMJ May 15;328(7449):1181-4

Medical Libraries secion 16 … Continued Why use a PDA? (Medicine) Improve access by medical staff to patient and drug information (Decreasing medication error rates) An effective tool for collection of health data. An effective tool for information dissemination. For Continuing Education

Medical Libraries secion 17 Third of Canadian physicians are using a PDA. More than half of MDs under age 35 now using PDAs.* Analysts predict that by 2004, 20% of physicians will use handhelds for e-prescribing, ordering and checking lab tests, capturing charges, and dictating notes. (Fisher J) *Source: More than half of MDs under age 35 now using PDAs. By: Martin, Shelley. CMAJ. Vol.169 Issue 9, 2003

Medical Libraries secion 18 Medline/PubMed for PDA:

Medical Libraries secion 19 DOHMS Libraries: PDA Services (Training Sessions, Training by appointment, Service Evaluation). Creation a PDA format forms and documents. Resources (Web site, FIRSTConsult, Bibliographies). Browse Resources prepared by DOHMS Libraries at: ********* Librarians must become familiar with this new technology changes and their libraries will need to be prepared to meet the changes. It is inevitable that medical libraries will become centres for PDA information, support, publication, education and synchronization for both professionals and patients.

Medical Libraries secion 20 More info = better decisions Knowledge should be held in tools that are kept up to date and used routinely—not in heads, which are expensive to load and faulty in the retention and processing of knowledge Good medical practice requires tools to extend the human mind's limited capacity to recall and process large numbers of relevant variables

Medical Libraries secion 21 Thank youThank you