Medical software for handheld computers is slowly but surely going online and wireless.
A new distribution model for software is emerging, and it's paired with a major change in hardware. Epocrates made its free
and enormously popular drug-reference tool accessible through the Internet in 2006. And last year, EHR powerhouse Allscripts
introduced eRx NOW, a web-based e-prescribing program. Allscripts still sells an e-prescribing program called TouchScript
that's installed on handhelds, but company president Lee Shapiro calls eRx NOW his "flagship product" in this category.
Web-based software for handhelds parallels the rise of the ASP, or application service provider, model for electronic health
record and practice management systems, in which software is hosted on a remote computer and typically accessed via the Internet.
"There's a big push by vendors to have applications run on the Web," says FP Lou Spikol, a former senior consultant for the
Center for Health Information Technology at the American Academy of Family Physicians. "It makes distributing the software
much easier for vendors." Physicians benefit from this new distribution model, too. Rather than having to periodically download new versions of software,
a doctor with an Internet-enabled handheld automatically taps into the latest and greatest. That's no small matter, since
the content of medical software is constantly being updated and expanded to improve patient care and streamline your work.
The rise of Web-based software reflects a sea change in hardware preferences. The traditional personal digital assistant,
or PDA, was designed for "native" programs—software installed on the device itself. However, PDA sales are falling as professionals
and consumers alike turn to all-purpose smartphones like the iPhone and the BlackBerry, which combine a telephone, Internet
connectivity, and PDA computing power.
Still, it would be a mistake to say that medical handheld computing is nothing but Net. While some doctors use their smartphones
to access software online, most still rely on native programs, by all accounts—and not just out of habit. You can't always
count on Internet connectivity through cellular lines or wireless networks. What's more, software runs a tad slower via the
Web. As Internet connectivity becomes more widespread and reliable and online programs speed up, the smartphone's Web browser
could become the primary gateway to medical software.
The device is only as good as the software
To help you narrow down your choices in medical software, we've compiled a list of 10 leading programs in six major categories—drug
reference, general medicine reference, patient tracking, calculators, coding and charge capture, and e-prescribing. (This
roster updates our article titled "10 great programs for your PDA," in the Dec. 2, 2005, issue of Medical Economics.)
In assembling a roster of programs, we received guidance from a panel of eight primary care doctors who also contributed to
our 2005 story. In addition to their individual use of handhelds, most of our panelists teach or write about their applications
in medicine. For every recommended program, we note what handheld operating system (OS) it runs on. For years, OS choices
for medical software boiled down to either Palm or Windows Pocket PC. In 2008, OS categories are longer and more complex,
with the addition of the BlackBerry OS, the Symbian OS for Nokia phones, and numerous permutations of Windows Mobile, the
successor to Windows Pocket PC.
With a browser-equipped handheld, however, you needn't worry about the operating system. You can simply log into the software
online. The little device in your hand is opening up a worldwide web of medicine.