The 5 Best Medical Apps for Healthcare Providers

April 22, 2021 - 6 minutes read

For the past year, being a healthcare provider has been extremely emotionally, mentally, and physically taxing. The daily life of a doctor involves not only taking care of patients, but managing office staff, staying current with medical news and innovations, and keeping an eye on the bottom line. With tens of thousands of mHealth mobile apps available on the Google Play and Apple App stores, there is no shortage of excellent apps to check out.

To help medical providers save more of their limited time, we’ve found five of the best medical apps that doctors can download to get ahead on the go.

1. PEPID

The Chicago-based medical information company, PEPID, has a data-rich mobile app that offers evidence-based conclusions for paramedics and doctors. This app is specifically aimed at helping emergency room paramedics and doctors diagnose their patients as quickly as possible. It’s also a great learning tool for nurses, students, residents, and interns during simulations and training and in time-sensitive situations.

The PEPID mobile app is available for Android and Apple devices, and it allows providers to filter by conditions, symptoms, and prescriptions. It even takes care to include possible multi-drug interactions during the patient’s treatment. With PEPID, doctors can diagnose patients based on several factors: lab results, symptoms, and exam results. The app also offers videos that show clinical exams and procedures. And to help providers stay current on cutting-edge treatments, it has an option to turn on push notifications for the latest medical news, research, and tools.

2. Epocrates

Epocrates is a wildly popular mobile app with medical professionals. It’s been downloaded millions of times, and providers use it to look up and reference drug information, find peers for consults and referrals, interact with patients, and even perform quick calculations like BMI during patient exams. This app offers a freemium model, where the free version is good enough to be used on its own, but upgrading to premium will unlock even more value.

For example, the premium version helps providers interpret lab results, find more information on diseases, or look for medication alternatives. This app is available for Android and Apple mobile devices.

3. Lexicomp

The Lexicomp app is a hospital system app that comes equipped with a large database of diseases, including oral diseases, toxicology, and infectious diseases. It’s an intuitive app that also includes information about drugs, their uses, and their effects on patients. Lexicomp comes with several medical dictionaries, and similar to the Epocrates app, it offers calculators for quick computations.

This app is available for Android and Apple users, but there is no free version, unlike Epocrates. It offers several subscription plans for providers to choose from, allowing them to pick a paid tier that fits their needs and budget.

4. Medscape

The Medscape mobile app is great for specialist providers because it allows them to choose their specialty and customize the information they want to see in the app. Choices include the latest news, treatments, research, drugs, and procedures. This app prevents information overload for providers by subjecting them to what they actually want to read about.

It also provides opportunities for medical providers to earn continuing education credits, which is an ongoing requirement for all medical professionals. Medscape is available for Android and Apple mobile devices, and it’s completely free to use.

5. DynaMed

The DynaMed app is highly rated for what it provides to healthcare professionals. It includes disease information, graphics, and images for learning, drug recommendations, an excellent search engine, content for specific specialties, information from accredited experts, and verified medical content. With this level of value, it’s not surprising that DynaMed is a paid app.

The app offers different pricing levels depending on if you’re registering with an institution (free), as a student ($99.95/year), or as a professional with no institutional affiliation ($395/year). It does offer a free trial so that providers can check if it works for them before taking the plunge with their credit card. Users on Android and Apple devices can download this app that’s been reviewed as intuitive, easy-to-use, and easy to search through.

mHealth app development

The Future of Healthcare Is Mobile

For our medical providers, getting the best education and continuing education directly benefits patients and healthcare systems. These five apps promise the latest guidance on drug recommendations and interactions, procedure protocols, patient exam calculators, and even continuing education. With these apps, even the smartest and most up-to-date providers will find something new to learn.

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