Science and Research Content

BMJ Best Practice is now better placed to support decision making at the point of care -

Clinical decision-making has become a little easier with the launch of a range of new features from BMJ Best Practice to help healthcare professionals make the best decisions with their patients.

Ranked one of the leading clinical decision support tools worldwide, BMJ Best Practice draws on the latest evidence-based research, guidelines and expert opinion to offer step-by-step guidance on diagnosis, prognosis, treatment and prevention.

The new Best Practice has been developed and tested with hundreds of healthcare professionals worldwide with a focus on their key needs. As a result, it is even better placed to support decision making at the point of care.

For instance, doctors said they wanted to find the latest information quickly and easily, whenever and wherever they need it. The new BMJ Best Practice delivers on this. Information is updated daily with drug alerts added within 48 hours of publication and practice-changing updates within 30 days to ensure doctors have the latest guidance at hand. The site supports searching in over 100 languages.

The website navigation and pages have been redesigned to make finding information quicker - and the award-winning app works offline, providing access anywhere.

Other significant features include the addition of procedural videos, nearly 400 patient leaflets, over 250 evidence-based medical calculators, integrated links to Cochrane Clinical Answers and improved differential diagnosis tables and treatment algorithms.

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