At a several recent meetings, colleagues have mentioned how they are finding it increasingly difficult managing information in various different settings.
I will be first to admit that I am not the most organized of people and am constantly trying to find solutions for this. Still these are tools I use regularly (except the Pomodoro) and they help immensely.
Some examples:
1. One colleague needs to have regularly scheduled meetings with a group of physicians. They need to share and collaboratively author documents. Not everyone can attend these meetings consistently.
2. Another colleague finds it difficult to keep up with literature in his specialty. He gets a lot of print journals, but does not have a streamlined way of recalling recent studies and finding them quickly when needed.
3. A third colleague finds that she is getting disorganized, gets distracted and is unable to complete elective but high stake tasks.
Three very common problems and here are the solutions I proposed to them. One criteria I used was to use tools that were free.
1. I suggested that he start using Google+ and Google Docs. It is very surprising how many people do NOT know about these tools. Sure there are other ways to do this but the sheer simplicity of Google Docs is a winner for any group with members that might be technically challenged. The commonest question I get is, "How do I save the document?" Some other questions are, "How do I share this document?" or "Does it track versions?"
I suggested he set up a Google circle with the participants. He could then start a Google document and set it up to be editable by anyone with a link. He could then copy the link and share it with the Google circle. He could also start a Hangout at the next meeting to discuss the document and those who could not attend live, could participate via the Hangout. Using Google Hangout with extras they could collaboratively edit the document.
The part he loved was that at the end of the Hangout, the document was finalized and he did not have to send it to anyone. They could all see it on Google Docs.
2. This conversation started when the colleague was complaining about the flood of lab results, copied charts, refill requests etc in his EHR inbox. I mentioned a recent Archives article where they found that 50% of such messages and alerts are not important. Even in the important messages 80% of the text is irrelevant to the critical message. He was surprised I was able recall the article and pull it up quickly on my laptop.
I described how I use Google Reader to subscribe to key journals in my area of interest. In addition I have set up RSS feeds on specific key words from PubMed. As I scan through the articles, I tag and organize them by specialty. I share some of these articles with colleagues on Twitter or Google+ which leads to some interesting discussions and helps ingrain the article in my memory.
The part that really works is finding the article that you have scanned/read/shared. Google reader has an excellent search function and quickly pulls up any article in your set of journals whether you have read it or not.
If you can spend some time each week scanning through your journals of interest on Google reader, you can generally recall studies that got published and can retrieve the article very quickly.
To get him started, I gave him a link to a bundle of medicine journals I follow. He was able to get started with these with 1 click!
3. The last case prompted me to suggest something that I have just started using. One of my medical students recommended Workflowy to me. This tool is another case of things being so simple that they just work. Workflowy lets you create a bulleted hierarchical list. The web page can be opened in any browser including on mobile devices. You start off by creating a high level list like
- Personal
- Family
- Work
I will be first to admit that I am not the most organized of people and am constantly trying to find solutions for this. Still these are tools I use regularly (except the Pomodoro) and they help immensely.