BMJ Best Practice

BMJ Best Practice is an online decision-support tool for use at the point of care. It was created in 2009 by BMJ.[1]

Development

BMJ launched Best Practice in 2009.

Product

In a 2016 article published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, Best Practice received maximum scores for strength of volume, editorial quality, and evidence-based methodology.[2]

Access

BMJ offers both personal and institutions subscriptions to the tool. Only institutional subscriptions are available for purchase in the United States and Canada. All institutional subscriptions include onsite and remote access, as well as access to the mobile app for iOS and Android devices.[3]

gollark: Just support the football team which wins, silly.
gollark: I mean, until AV1 encoders get better and hardware ones exist.
gollark: Eternally.
gollark: That might improve, but right now only a few things have hardware *de*code for it.
gollark: Anyway, given the total lack of AV1 hardware encoders regular people can buy, it isn't a very suitable replacement for H.264, which is the most common video codec basically everywhere.

See also

References

  1. Protus, Bridget McCrate (2014-07-01). "BMJ Best Practice". Journal of the Medical Library Association. 102 (3): 224–225. doi:10.3163/1536-5050.102.3.020. ISSN 1536-5050. PMC 4076139.
  2. Kwag, Koren Hyogene; González-Lorenzo, Marien; Banzi, Rita; Bonovas, Stefanos; Moja, Lorenzo (2016-01-01). "Providing Doctors With High-Quality Information: An Updated Evaluation of Web-Based Point-of-Care Information Summaries". Journal of Medical Internet Research. 18 (1): e15. doi:10.2196/jmir.5234. PMC 4738183. PMID 26786976.
  3. Protus, Bridget McCrate (2014-07-01). "BMJ Best Practice". Journal of the Medical Library Association. 102 (3): 224–225. doi:10.3163/1536-5050.102.3.020. ISSN 1536-5050. PMC 4076139.
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