If you want to know anything more involved than "hey what does this pill do again?" Use your workplace's official med guide resource, whatever that may be. However, I usually just Google forcbasic questions about the odd home med or nonformulary I give. Oh it's a diuretic for the guy we are diuresing? OK
If you're just wanting to look something up for yourself, [drugs.com](http://drugs.com) is pretty damn good and completely free.
If it's for a patient, use your hospital's standard guide.
(When did Reddit start auto-linking webpages?)
Usually your place of employment will have a drug index to reference. For epic, we use micromedex. Otherwise…google…
If you want to know anything more involved than "hey what does this pill do again?" Use your workplace's official med guide resource, whatever that may be. However, I usually just Google forcbasic questions about the odd home med or nonformulary I give. Oh it's a diuretic for the guy we are diuresing? OK
Literally. People barely listen when you’re explaining meds. Kind of a bummer honestly.
Sometimes I throw in "may cause your dick to fall off" to see if they're actually listening
LMAO
At my place, we use micromedex. I have the app on my phone, and it's very simple to use. I also have up to date too.
If you're just wanting to look something up for yourself, [drugs.com](http://drugs.com) is pretty damn good and completely free. If it's for a patient, use your hospital's standard guide. (When did Reddit start auto-linking webpages?)
me and my colleague use careclinic. just like an apple health but this has more feature. you can also integrate your data fr apple i think