There is also a mind-bending back catalogue of evidence available for download, all the more incredible for the fact that it is free. All that is required of you is an email address with which to set up an account.
Medscape ranks in Apple’s top app downloads, and it is easy to determine why. The app can be downloaded on to many devices, eg, iPhones, iPods, Blackberrys, Androids and Kindlefires, and has an easily navigable format, with large enough icons that you won’t forever be hitting the wrong button.
Medscape is developed by WebMD, the group responsible for various online medical resources, including eMedicine and Rxlist. The Medscape app is constantly developing with frequent evidence updates and an ever-expanding number of conditions covered (currently 4,000+). The content is written and peer-reviewed by 7,000 physicians representing numerous institutions, so somewhat more reliable than the good doctors Google and Wiki. Many articles also come with illustrations and videos, which are particularly handy for the anatomy segments and the section giving step-by-step instructions for 600-plus clinical procedures – an improvement on the ‘see one, do one’ ethos.
Of all the apps I discovered, Medscape stands out as being an incredibly versatile and useful tool
Medscape’s drug reference contains detailed prescribing information for more than 8,000 drugs (prescription, OTC and supplements). The only downfall is that some of the drugs are not listed in their English format (eg, Acetaminophen is listed for Paracetamol). There is also a drug interaction checker that allows the user to cross-check multiple drugs/supplements against each other to ensure they’re prescribing safely. Not only that, Medscape incorporates numerous medical calculator tools, relevant to each specialty.
I’ve highlighted some of my favourite aspects of the app, but there’s much more to take advantage of including daily news updates, 100-plus clinical protocols, monthly hot topics with latest practice updates, and the ability to carry out Medline searches within the app.
I’d thoroughly recommend adding Medscape to your device, and whilst you may not be fast enough to impress your senior by looking up the answers to ward round questions, you can enter each on-call, whatever your specialty, armed with the wisdom of 100 textbooks in your back pocket.