
24 Tools No Doctor Should Be Without
Key Takeaways
- Physicians benefit from tools like EHR systems, ePocrates Online, and UpToDate for efficient practice management and evidence-based decision-making.
- Resources such as the Cochrane Library and PubMed offer access to high-quality, independent evidence and extensive bibliographic citations.
Modern MDs have a vast array of tools and information at their disposal that can help them deliver better care to their patients, run their practices more efficiently, and stay up to date.
Modern physicians have a vast array of tools and information at their disposal that can help them deliver better care to their patients, run their practices more efficiently, and stay up to date with the latest research. In fact, there are so many tools available that it can be next to impossible to sort through them all and determine which ones are truly the most useful. We consulted several MDNG editorial board members to determine which tools and resources they rely on and compiled this list of the top tools every physician should at least be familiar with, if not use in his or her everyday practice. According to Frank Freemon, MD, neurologist, “The right tools can make an expert out of an otherwise ordinary guy.”
For the Office
1. Office Desktop Computer. If you don’t use a computer in your home or practice, you likely can’t make much use of this article—most of the tools discussed herein require a Mac or PC. Having said that, if you’re looking to upgrade your current system we recommend a custom-made PC from
2. Affordable and Easy-to-Use EHR System. According to MDNG Physician Editor-in-Chief Jonathan M. Bertman, MD, EHR systems “that aren’t affordable and/or easy-to-learn are actually the #1 tool a doctor should avoid at all costs!” We recommend checking out Dr. Bertman's own
3. ePocrates Online. This free drug and formulary reference offers access to more than 3,300 brand and generic drug monographs, with coverage including both on- and off-label dosing, pricing, adverse reactions, contraindications, mechanism of action, and drug interactions. Also included are integrated health insurance formularies, print and e-mail functions, explanations of medical abbreviations, and a multiple-drug interaction checker. Learn more at
4. Micromedex. Delivering “clinical knowledge solutions” through any combination of integration options, an intranet, the Internet, a PDA, a network, or a stand-alone CD-ROM,
5. UpToDate. Providing evidence-based information via the Internet, CD-ROM, or Pocket PC,
6. MedlinePlus. Direct your patients to this comprehensive online resource from the US National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health.
7. E-Communication With Patients. In 2005, Shou Ling Leong, MD, and colleagues from Penn State College of Medicine studied four physicians who offered to their patients the option of communicating via e-mail and four physicians who did not.
8. Exam or Consultation Room Computers. Be it a desktop, laptop, tablet, or handheld, a computer in the exam or consultation room allows the physician, as well as his or her support staff, to access virtually any needed information—depending on capabilities and implemented software—at the point of care. Among the best laptops are the the
9. NexCura Professional Tool. The
10. MD Consult. Users of this online service include more than 90% of North American medical schools and more than 1,700 healthcare organizations in 46 countries.
11. Cochrane Library. Available by subscription, this online evidence-based medicine resource (
12. Ovid. Access a growing list of 1,200 top journals, more than 500 texts, and more than 200 databases with this tool that offers innovative information search and discovery and customized services, complete with 24/7, award-winning technical support. Search electronic versions of highly regarded books from cover to cover, “one of the largest single-database aggregations of 100% searchable scientific, technical and medical full text journals in the world,” clinical decision support tools, and premium mixes of Ovid content and tools tailored to specific subjects. Check it out at
13. Screen OCR. Can’t copy the text from an online resource you’d like to copy for yourself or a patient? Capture any text on your computer screen (even in graphics format), and convert it to text with this screen capture and character recognition tool that saves and recognizes everything you see, be it an image, scanned text, a .PDF, or page presented in HTML format. Users simply choose a selection mode, select the data, and copy it to the clipboard and then integrate into any word processing program. Download a free, 21-day sample at
14. The ICD-9-CM Online Database. Find every code you need with this database, compiled from files available from the National Center of Health Statistics and including tabular and alphabetic indexes for classification of disease and injuries and classification of procedures, as well as a table of drugs and chemicals and an alphabetic index to external causes. You’ll definitely want to add this one to your favorites list:
15. PubMed. If it’s been published in a clinical journal and you don’t find it here, then you likely won’t find it anywhere.
16. .Mac Account. Synchronize, back up, and share files, and publish your own webpage with a
17. Google Desktop. Search your e-mail, files, music, photos, chats, Gmail (Google’s e-mail service), web sites you’ve visited, and more with this
18. OnCall Scheduling System. Create and fine-tune your schedules with this online tool, and then view them online, page staff, e-mail personal calendars, and field special requests at amion.com, what one of our editorial board members calls “simply the best way to maintain call schedules online.” For $249 per year,
For the Home Office
More and more, physicians are unable to keep a work/home balance, with work following them home. Therefore, we offer the following recommendations for technology to add to your home, thanks to editorial board member Eric G. Tangalos, MD, FACP, AGSF, CMD.
19. Wireless Internet Network w. Signal Booster. Most Internet service providers now offer wireless service, allowing you to check your e-mail, plan a vacation, and buy that rare Beanie Baby you’ve had your eye on at eBay while sitting on the couch, at the kitchen table, or on “the throne.” Contact your provider for details on how to go wireless at home if you haven’t done so already. For those looking to go it alone, it seems that
20. 5.8GHz Phone(s). Upgrading to a 5.8GHz cordless phone (especially worthwhile for persons using 2.4GHz phones, as they use the same frequency most commonly used for wireless internet) will provide users with cell phone-like memory and phone books, as well as an in-house intercom and base stations that serve as answering machines. Enjoy security, clarity, and long range, as 5.8GHz phones offer less traffic than traditional 2.4GHz phones. We recommend the
For When You’re on the Go
21. PDA. “In the near future, a physician will no longer consider seeing patients without a handheld device (PDA) any more than seeing them without a stethoscope,”
22. Bluetooth Hands-free Car Link. Take hands-free calling to the next step with a Bluetooth hands-free car link that allows users to dial and receive mobile phone calls without taking their hands off the wheel or wearing one of those goofy headsets.
23. Laptop/Notebook/Tablet Computer. By now, just about everybody knows what a laptop—or any variation thereof (ie, notebook or tablet)—is, and that they allow users to bring most of the functionality of a desktop computer with them wherever they go, with battery life as really the only limit. Although laptop and notebook are used interchangeably, tablets add the use of a touch screen that allows users to operate the computer with a stylus, digital pen, or fingertip, as opposed to a keyboard and mouse. The use of each of the above in healthcare may not be so well known; physicians can enter information into a patient’s EMR and e-mail a prescription to the pharmacy while in the exam room, refer to lab results while on the couch in their living room, or write and edit their latest submission to MDNG (e-mail us for information on how to do this) while on the train.
24. Broadband PC Card. Now that you’re on the go with your spiffy new laptop, you’ll need Internet access.


























































