rss
J Am Med Inform Assoc 2007;14:807-815 doi:10.1197/jamia.M2424
  • Original Investigation
  • Research Paper

Using Wireless Handheld Computers to Seek Information at the Point of Care: An Evaluation by Clinicians

  1. Susan E Hauser,
  2. Dina Demner-Fushman,
  3. Joshua L Jacobs,
  4. Susanne M Humphrey,
  5. Glenn Ford,
  6. George R Thoma
  1. Affiliations of the authors: Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, DHHS (SEH, DD-F, SMH, GL, GRT), Bethesda, MD; John A. Burns School of Medicine (JLJ), University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI
  1. Correspondence: Dina Demner-Fushmen, Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications, National Library of Information, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20894; e-mail: <ddemner{at}mail.nih.gov>
  • Received 6 March 2007
  • Accepted 14 July 2007

Abstract

Objective To evaluate: (1) the effectiveness of wireless handheld computers for online information retrieval in clinical settings; (2) the role of MEDLINE® in answering clinical questions raised at the point of care.

Design A prospective single-cohort study: accompanying medical teams on teaching rounds, five internal medicine residents used and evaluated MD on Tap, an application for handheld computers, to seek answers in real time to clinical questions arising at the point of care.

Measurements All transactions were stored by an intermediate server. Evaluators recorded clinical scenarios and questions, identified MEDLINE citations that answered the questions, and submitted daily and summative reports of their experience. A senior medical librarian corroborated the relevance of the selected citation to each scenario and question.

Results Evaluators answered 68% of 363 background and foreground clinical questions during rounding sessions using a variety of MD on Tap features in an average session length of less than four minutes. The evaluator, the number and quality of query terms, the total number of citations found for a query, and the use of auto-spellcheck significantly contributed to the probability of query success.

Conclusion Handheld computers with Internet access are useful tools for healthcare providers to access MEDLINE in real time. MEDLINE citations can answer specific clinical questions when several medical terms are used to form a query. The MD on Tap application is an effective interface to MEDLINE in clinical settings, allowing clinicians to quickly find relevant citations.

Footnotes

  • This study was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine, and by the National Institutes of Health, Office of Evaluation award number 05-121-NLM.

  • 1 Stopword terms are common words that have little or no meaning by themselves, such as the, of, on, and are not indexed for most search engines.

This Article

Services

  1. Request permissions

Responses

  1. Submit a response
  2. No responses published

Social bookmarking

Access policy for JAMIA

All content published in JAMIA is deposited with PubMed Central by the publisher with a 12 month embargo. Authors/funders may pay an Unlocked fee of $2,000 to make the article free on the JAMIA website and PMC immediately on publication.

All content older than 12 months is freely available on this website.

AMIA members can log in with their JAMIA user name (email address) and password or via the AMIA website.