Clinician's Pocket Drug Reference 2012

by MobiSystems, Inc.
Price: $12.99
Sold by:Amazon.com Services, Inc
Languages Supported: English, French, German, Italian, Spanish

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Product Details

Release Date: 2010
Date first listed on Amazon: June 13, 2010
Developed By: MobiSystems, Inc.
ASIN: B004JYCHWW

Product features

  • Organized alphabetically by generic drug name
  • Includes a list of the medications organized by drug classification
  • Summaries of the FDA “black box” precautions and contraindications
  • Updated to include coverage of more than 24 new drugs and the removal of drugs taken off the market
  • Support for memory cards

Product description

The Clinician's Pocket Drug Reference 1st Edition provides information on 1000 of the most commonly used medications. With quick, dynamic searching, pronunciations facilitated by transcriptions, and hyperlinks between different related words, it's an essential medical guide. Each entry lists common uses, mechanisms of action, dosages (adult and pediatric), precautions/contraindications, form supplied, and notes/common side effects. Filters, including a Fuzzy Filter, allow for instances of unsure spelling. The Clinician's Pocket Drug Reference 1st Edition is presented in MSDict electronic format.

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Technical details

Size: 599.1KB
Version: 2.12.68
Developed By: MobiSystems, Inc.
Application Permissions: ( Help me understand what permissions mean )
  • Access information about Wi-Fi networks
  • Open network sockets
  • Read only access to device state
Minimum Operating System: Android 1.5
Approximate Download Time: Less than 30 seconds

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
3 global ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2012
    i was very displeased to discover many drugs were not in the reference, just playing with it. it also does not appear to cross reference, as Ativan was not found and Lorazapam was.
    i like Epocrates on my phone (this is a kindle fire) is much better, as is Netscape, both of which I believe were free. i am a RN.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2011
    I like having this drug guide on my Kindle Fire. Medical books are so huge and when doing clinicals, its impossible to tote around all the text books. My Kindle Fire, with my drug reference guide, slide rights into my scrub pocket. I did have to reference drugs a couple of weeks ago and I had no problems. Wonderful quick reference.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2015
    Just perfect!!!
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