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Office for the Healthcare Professional
 
Healthcare and Office
Applies to
Microsoft Office 2003

Does this sound familiar? A new patient is sitting in your office, and you are taking notes on her general health. She tells you what her current medications are, describes her family medical history, and mentions past surgeries. Sometime between her departure and the arrival of the next patient, you need to add that information to a least three other places in her chart. A day in the life of a doctor or nurse is filled with requirements, but in an office that relies on paper, it can be rough trying to keep up.

author="kevin rexroat" time="20040121T001030-0800"{{Microsoft }}Office author="kevin rexroat" time="20040121T001035-0800"{{2003 }}has many tools that can help make your work day efficient and productive, and Office is probably already on your desktop computer. Here are how-to articles and columns, created with the input of healthcare professionals, that will help you use Office effectively in your practice.

Meet author="kevin rexroat" time="20040121T001102-0800" data="I"author="kevin rexroat" time="20040121T001102-0800"{{i}}nnovative Office users

Medical Informaticist works with Access to map disease references

Access and Tablet PC: Working well together

The power of Excel charts to show success

Working with Office

Translate your healthcare handouts

Save hundreds of administrative hours with Word

Customize the Word Dictionary for Medical Terms

Manage Healthcare Schedules with Outlook

From healthcare practitioners

Patients, doctors, and e-mail

Productivity for the Nurse Manager
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