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Digital Doctoring

ssajous writes "This is an interesting article in the NY times which talks about PDAs quickly finding their place in the world of medical billing and keeping track of patient's care, there is a lot of money in the medical field, but also currently a lot of unnecessary paper work. I like what I see!!!" I don't think Palm makes a tricorder card yet, but it's only a matter of time. The last time I saw a doctor, he was doing things the old-fashioned way - I would guess it will take a while before this sort of technology is widely used.

4 of 116 comments (clear)

  1. newton by spoot · · Score: 4

    believe it or not the Newton had made a lot of inroads into this before Steve killed it. A lot of the apps for the Newton were specifically medical/hospital.

    1. Re:newton by jim.robinson · · Score: 4

      And from what I've read it sounds like the Newton was a very big hit for those who used it to track their patients. The pilot strikes me as too small to use for this purpose. I bought one a few years ago, right before they started to really catch on. I ended up ditching it and hunting down a used Newton MessagePad 2000.

      For those interested in a very good article about the use of a PDA in medical settings, I highly recommend reading A Day in the Life of my Newton.

      Jim

  2. My local dr's office recently upgraded by dmorin · · Score: 4

    To a new everything, so that now there is a complete PC (Windows) in every office that brings up your history, the works...and even sends prescriptions over to the pharmacy for pickup. Of course, when they implemented it at first there were tremendous problems (like 3 hour lines for drugs) but they seem to have worked it out now. I'm just afraid that I'm going to go in there for something serious one day and his machine is going to crash in the middle of something important, thus giving Blue Screen of Death a whole new meaning. (Ok, I bet I'm not the first one to say that. :))

  3. Palm brings serious benefits to Patient side too.. by The+Optimizer · · Score: 4

    I've learned about this first-hand: Last year, My wife was diagnosed with Type II diabetes in the aftermath of a failed pregnancy.

    People diagnosed with Type II diabetes often have to test their blood seven (7!) times a day (or more!) in the first few years, and record the results, time/date, and diet info for their doctors. Manually, this can be a pain in the ass, especially when full records for 2 months need to be given to a doctor.

    Right after being diagnosed, my wife found out about Glucopilot (see http://www.healthetech.com/), an award-winning program for the palm OS, which prompted her to buy a Palm V and a hard case. It does a wonderful job of recording, handling, and outputting & graphing the data. With the purchase of a small cable (made one myself, ha!) it can read the output of some blood sugar testers directly and eliminate the manual entry of numbers all together.

    Her doctors, both of whom where unfamiliar with the program, were astounded by it and the detailed data it provided when she show it to them, and they began mentioning it to their other patients.

    It's not just the Glucopilot software though, My wife found several other programs for the Palm that she uses to track diet, and other medical info like details on her menstral cycle, sudden sickenesses, and anything else.

    Where this really makes the impact is on the day-to-day lifestyle front. She has a tiny case that she carries with her eveywhere she goes because it is so compact and totable. It holds her Palm V, and her blood testing gear. Because the form factor is so friendly, and the software provides such immediate feedback on blood-level trends, etc, she has displayed incredible dicipline in taking readings and entering data as it occurs. And that dicipline has seriously impressed me and her doctors, and is probably why they are saying she will be able to control the condition without needing insulin shots, etc.

    The palm has been great for collecting all my loose data in one place, and I see specialized, easy-to-use medical tracking and info software as providing great benefit to people who have problems that are ongoing and have to shared with their doctors.