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Journal of Child Neurology
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Mobile Medical Computing Driven by the Complexity of Neurologic Diagnosis

Michael M. Segal, MD, PhD

SimulConsult Inc., Chestnut Hill, MA, jcn{at}simulconsult.com

Medical computing has been split between palm-sized computers optimized for mobility and desktop computers optimized for capability. This split was due to technology too immature to deliver both mobility and capability in the same computer and the lack of medical software that demanded both mobility and capability. Advances in hardware and software are ushering in an era in which fully capable computers will be available ubiquitously. As a result, medical practice, education and publishing will change. Medical practice will be improved by the use of software that not only assists with diagnosis but can do so at the bedside, where the doctor can act immediately upon suggestions such as useful findings to check. Medical education will shift away from a focus on details of unusual diseases and toward a focus on skills of physical examination and using computerized tools. Medical publishing, in contrast, will shift toward greater detail: it will be increasingly important to quantitate the frequency of findings in diseases and their time course since such information can have a major impact clinically when added to decision support software. (J Child Neurol 2006;21:595—599; DOI 10.2310/7010.2006.00155).

Journal of Child Neurology, Vol. 21, No. 7, 595-599 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/08830738060210071601


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