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Should UK Doctors be using the New contract Free iPhone on rounds? -...
Should UK Doctors be using the New contract Free iPhone on rounds? - freebiejeebies.org investigates
With the release of the New Free iPhone, it's becoming clear that the medical apps available are becoming essential to Medical Students. Will the iPhone become essential to Medcine in 2010?
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Free-Press-Release.com) May 10, 2009 --
After all the years of being tutted at for using your mobile phone whilst anywhere near a patient, (heaven forbid it should be in a hospital) I was slightly surprised when I discovered that there are medical applications available, specifically targetting Medical Students and Doctors.
Now, I can imagine there are certain advantages to having all the information for the millions of drugs, and hundreds of thousands of conditions that could be affecting your patient. Is there life after the stigma of the mobile in hospitals?
I think so. It's been proven recently by many organisations that the frequencies mobiles use are harmless to medical equipment, so why shouldn't your Doctor have all of the (possibly hundreds) of side effects that could result if he gives you that drug in combination with your statin?
Personally, I'd be alot more comfortable, knowing that the person administering my medication can use an iPhone app to calculate my dosage, rather than making a decimal place error when mentally calculating it, and making me ill, if not more.
Now.... I'm a little biased. I am a medical student. Friends of mine have the iPhone, and use it for everything from diagnosis to drug reviews. I would personally feel alot more confident with an iPhone in my pocket, I want my (eventual) patients to get the very best care, and that means I want to make sure that I'm prescribing to the best of my ability.
Anyone who has ever used a massive medical text book, (let alone 20 for referencing one condition) will know how impractical the world of medical knowledge is. Having all that information in a handy form (namely on an iPhone) would be a monumental, even a revolutionary change in the UK medical profession, I believe, for the better.
Now, there is the matter of cost. Most medical students have a debt of ~£25,000 by graduation. The wage for a Junior doctor averages aroung £20,000 per annum. That means however, that most will not be able to afford an iPhone, let alone the iPhone contract. (In excess of £35/month for most).
This is where http://Freebiejeebies.org comes in. Anyone can get a contract free iPhone from http://Freebiejeebies.org, medical students and junior doctors included.
They’ve already helped many people get freebies. A bonus is the no contracts, no scams, no cash, no bull attitude of the owner.
http://Freebiejeebies.org was set up by a medical student who wanted to help others find their way through the world of Freebies, and FreebieJeebies certainly makes it a little easier for people who don’t quite understand how someone can give away something for nothing.Visit http://FreebieJeebies.org and have a look at the massive range of goodies on offer, as it has to be seen.
Found to be legitimate by an independent report by the BBC’s ‘Newsnight’.
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