Food-Medication Interactions Handbook 16th edition |
V4.0 images will look identical to those below |
Table of Contents Easy to navigate Drug-Nutrient Interaction information is arranged in alphabetical order by generic drug name. With just a couple of taps of your stylus, you can access information for any product, or browse through the monographs. FMI V4.0 on PDA puts the answer to the tough clinical questions within your hands, anywhere you go, anytime you need it. |
|
Be More
Efficient with Hyperlinks Link right to the answers for your patient No more flipping back and forth in the print version to find the cross-reference to a trade name, just tap your stylus on the generic name hyperlink, and instantly the information you are looking for is displayed on-screen. |
|
Search for the Answer Find needed information quickly Tap the magnifying glass on the bottom of the reader screen, and enter the name of the drug, lab test or adverse effect you want to search for. You can search the current page or the entire document, and even repeat the search multiple times. |
|
Make Your Mark Save important items as bookmarks There are certain drugs and lab tests that keep coming up again and again in your practice, so leave a bookmark on this frequently accessed information, and then jump to this data whenever it is needed. You can store, rename, and jump to these bookmarks anytime from the bottom taskbar of the reader. Bookmarks persist even when the manual is closed, so they're always there when needed. |
|
Tables
Turned into
Powerful Tools Analyze nutritional status, recommend dietary changes Tables in the PDA are just as jam-packed with information as in the print version of Food-Medication Interactions. On standard resolution PDA screens, you can scroll the screen from left to right to read data that goes beyond the standard page boundaries. Height-weight tables, Grapefruit-Drug Interactions, Salt substitutes, body weight and BMI calculations, they're all here ! |
|
FDA Pregnancy Categories Know right away about medication risks You'll be even quicker than the pharmacy consultant when it comes to looking up pregnancy risk categories for medications. Each drug monograph has a pregnancy categorization, with a link to details about each FDA pregnancy category. |
|
Canadian
content, eh? Canadian brand names exclusive to PDA Many Canadian brand names for drugs differ from their American counterparts. (e.g. dimenhydrinate, called Dramamine in the USA, goes by the brand name Gravol in Canada). With an influx of Canadian medications into the USA, its important to know brand name differences so that you know which medication you're dealing with. All Canadian brand names are denoted by a symbol. This information is only available in the PDA software V4.0. Watch for Canadian excipient information in updates. |
|
Copyright © 1997-2010 Food-Medication
Interactions. |