Guide to Good Prescribing - A Practical Manual
(1994; 115 pages) [French] [Spanish] Voir le document au format PDF
Table des matières
Afficher le documentAcknowledgments
Afficher le documentWhy you need this book
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuPart 1: Overview
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuPart 2: Selecting your P(ersonal) drugs
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuPart 3: Treating your patients
Fermer ce répertoirePart 4: Keeping up-to-date
Fermer ce répertoireChapter 12. How to keep up-to-date about drugs
Afficher le documentMake an inventory of available sources of information
Afficher le documentChoose between sources of information
Afficher le documentEfficient reading
Afficher le documentConclusion
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuAnnexes
Afficher le documentBack Cover
 

Choose between sources of information

The advantages and disadvantages of various drug information sources have been outlined. Possible information sources will vary according to country and your own personal situation. Your job is now to decide how best to keep up-to-date, by making a list of all the possible resources to which you have access. Try to find at least one each of the following: (1) medical journals; (2) drug bulletins; (3) pharmacology or clinical reference books; (4) therapeutic committees or consultants or a postgraduate training course.

Although your primary source of prescribing information in your daily clinical work should be your personal formulary, you will sometimes face a difficult problem, which calls for an additional source of information. This could be a pharmacology or clinical reference book, a drug bulletin, consultants (pharmacist, specialist, colleagues), a drug compendium or a formulary.

The limitations of commercial information have been clearly described. If you decide, nevertheless, that it has a role to play, follow the ground rules already outlined. But do not use commercial information in isolation from other more objective sources.

vers la section précédente vers la section suivante
 

Dernière mise à jour: le 3 mai 2013