Article Type
Changed
Mon, 04/16/2018 - 14:17
Display Headline
Currentpsychiatry.com: Solutions in seconds

Pressed for time? Then discover the time-saving resources available at www.currentpsychiatry.com. Our Web site now has full-text HTML and PDF versions of any article we have ever published. You can search by title, subject, or author; read Web-only content such as Dr. John Luo’s “Psyber Psychiatry;” earn CME credits online, and much more.

I have used currentpsychiatry.com twice recently to solve real clinical problems:

 

  • One weekend, an 80-year-old patient was concerned about medication interactions. I got the information I needed on cytochrome P-450 isoenzymes without having to search the whole Internet or evaluate a hundred different sites’ reliability. Even more important, I didn’t have to make a special trip to my office or the library.
  • Another time, a patient asked me what I knew about omega-3 fatty acids and ADHD. She and I visited the site and discussed the data on the spot.

Having this information online makes it difficult to justify keeping old journals for years. I found my March 2005 editorial on this topic in seconds by entering “hoarding” in the site’s search field. I never would have found that issue in my messy office. It also makes it difficult to justify using books as reference sources because they quickly become outdated, whereas our Web site remains forever current.

f

Article PDF
Author and Disclosure Information

 


James Randolph Hillard, MD
Editor-in-Chief

Issue
Current Psychiatry - 04(05)
Publications
Page Number
11-11
Sections
Author and Disclosure Information

 


James Randolph Hillard, MD
Editor-in-Chief

Author and Disclosure Information

 


James Randolph Hillard, MD
Editor-in-Chief

Article PDF
Article PDF

Pressed for time? Then discover the time-saving resources available at www.currentpsychiatry.com. Our Web site now has full-text HTML and PDF versions of any article we have ever published. You can search by title, subject, or author; read Web-only content such as Dr. John Luo’s “Psyber Psychiatry;” earn CME credits online, and much more.

I have used currentpsychiatry.com twice recently to solve real clinical problems:

 

  • One weekend, an 80-year-old patient was concerned about medication interactions. I got the information I needed on cytochrome P-450 isoenzymes without having to search the whole Internet or evaluate a hundred different sites’ reliability. Even more important, I didn’t have to make a special trip to my office or the library.
  • Another time, a patient asked me what I knew about omega-3 fatty acids and ADHD. She and I visited the site and discussed the data on the spot.

Having this information online makes it difficult to justify keeping old journals for years. I found my March 2005 editorial on this topic in seconds by entering “hoarding” in the site’s search field. I never would have found that issue in my messy office. It also makes it difficult to justify using books as reference sources because they quickly become outdated, whereas our Web site remains forever current.

f

Pressed for time? Then discover the time-saving resources available at www.currentpsychiatry.com. Our Web site now has full-text HTML and PDF versions of any article we have ever published. You can search by title, subject, or author; read Web-only content such as Dr. John Luo’s “Psyber Psychiatry;” earn CME credits online, and much more.

I have used currentpsychiatry.com twice recently to solve real clinical problems:

 

  • One weekend, an 80-year-old patient was concerned about medication interactions. I got the information I needed on cytochrome P-450 isoenzymes without having to search the whole Internet or evaluate a hundred different sites’ reliability. Even more important, I didn’t have to make a special trip to my office or the library.
  • Another time, a patient asked me what I knew about omega-3 fatty acids and ADHD. She and I visited the site and discussed the data on the spot.

Having this information online makes it difficult to justify keeping old journals for years. I found my March 2005 editorial on this topic in seconds by entering “hoarding” in the site’s search field. I never would have found that issue in my messy office. It also makes it difficult to justify using books as reference sources because they quickly become outdated, whereas our Web site remains forever current.

f

Issue
Current Psychiatry - 04(05)
Issue
Current Psychiatry - 04(05)
Page Number
11-11
Page Number
11-11
Publications
Publications
Article Type
Display Headline
Currentpsychiatry.com: Solutions in seconds
Display Headline
Currentpsychiatry.com: Solutions in seconds
Sections
Article PDF Media