I first heard about Evernote from one of my attendings who recommended that I try the service as a way of organizing my cluttered life. Until then, I had been recording interesting radiology cases on scraps of paper, saved email attachments, or recorded on a Google Documents spreadsheet. The beauty of Evernote is its elegance of storing, categorizing, and retrieving information. Evernote.com is an online storage for images, notes and PDFs that is accessible from the internet or basically any internet ready device. All notes, PDFs and images are cataloged and can be searched, even text within images! The following is a video on how one medical student uses Evernote as a medical peripheral brain: I think this has huge potential for radiology but I'm still in the early phases of testing out the service. I will report back once I have a firm grasp of how Evernote can benefit the every day radiologist. If you have experience with Evernote, I want to hear about it. To learn more or try out their free service, go to Evernote.com. ![]() I can always use more sleep. Whether I'm post-call from the hospital, scrambling to study for upcoming exams, or was up late taking care of the new baby, the power nap is one of my favorite tools to jump start my brain when I'm feeling a little foggy. Drastic times call for drastic measures and to make a power nap even more powerful, I use a little "nap enhancer" or the so-called caffeine power nap. Apparently, in a driving simulator and a series of studies, some investigators, Horne and Reyner, researched the effects of cold air, radio, a break with no nap, a nap, caffeine pill vs. placebo and a short nap preceded by caffeine on mildly sleep-deprived subjects. By far the most effective in reducing driving "incidents" and subjective sleepiness was the caffeine power nap. Here is how I perform the caffeine power nap:
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