When NOT to apply a score
Always know if the score applies to YOUR patient.Some wise person once said, “A fool with a tool is still a fool.” You’ll have myriad tests at your disposal to order with one click, and almost 400 scores to choose from on MDCalc, but knowing when and when not to use these tools is what makes a smart doctor.
Scores on MDCalc make it clear when (and when not) to use them. It’s basically the inclusion and exclusion criteria from the study, summarized by our expert contributors who are doctors that use the score every day.
Above all else, use common sense!
Blind them with science! (Science… science…)
Believe it or not, there are some things your attendings don’t know. New evidence is published every day, but there’s a lot of noise among the signal. Got a patient presenting with syncope who you want to risk-stratify after doing a basic workup? Search for “syncope” and find the Canadian Syncope Risk Score, and in ~2 minutes you can calculate your individual patient’s risk for a serious adverse event, and in the Evidence section, see that it’s based on a Canadian prospective cohort study of about 4,000 syncope patients in 6 EDs, and that “serious adverse events” included death, arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, and others.
When NOT to apply a score
Always know if the score applies to YOUR patient.Some wise person once said, “A fool with a tool is still a fool.” You’ll have myriad tests at your disposal to order with one click, and almost 400 scores to choose from on MDCalc, but knowing when and when not to use these tools is what makes a smart doctor.
Scores on MDCalc make it clear when (and when not) to use them. It’s basically the inclusion and exclusion criteria from the study, summarized by our expert contributors who are doctors that use the score every day.
Above all else, use common sense!
Blind them with science! (Science… science…)
Believe it or not, there are some things your attendings don’t know. New evidence is published every day, but there’s a lot of noise among the signal. Got a patient presenting with syncope who you want to risk-stratify after doing a basic workup? Search for “syncope” and find the Canadian Syncope Risk Score, and in ~2 minutes you can calculate your individual patient’s risk for a serious adverse event, and in the Evidence section, see that it’s based on a Canadian prospective cohort study of about 4,000 syncope patients in 6 EDs, and that “serious adverse events” included death, arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, and others.
When NOT to apply a score
Always know if the score applies to YOUR patient.Some wise person once said, “A fool with a tool is still a fool.” You’ll have myriad tests at your disposal to order with one click, and almost 400 scores to choose from on MDCalc, but knowing when and when not to use these tools is what makes a smart doctor.
Scores on MDCalc make it clear when (and when not) to use them. It’s basically the inclusion and exclusion criteria from the study, summarized by our expert contributors who are doctors that use the score every day.
Above all else, use common sense!
Blind them with science! (Science… science…)
Believe it or not, there are some things your attendings don’t know. New evidence is published every day, but there’s a lot of noise among the signal. Got a patient presenting with syncope who you want to risk-stratify after doing a basic workup? Search for “syncope” and find the Canadian Syncope Risk Score, and in ~2 minutes you can calculate your individual patient’s risk for a serious adverse event, and in the Evidence section, see that it’s based on a Canadian prospective cohort study of about 4,000 syncope patients in 6 EDs, and that “serious adverse events” included death, arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, and others.
1) Don’t bury the lede...
After taking a detailed history, the temptation is to convey all the information you have just discovered. Resist the temptation and get right to the point.“This is a patient who is a 42-year-old man with a history of hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, family history of lupus in a second cousin, and his neighbor’s dog-walker had a cough 10 years ago. He doesn’t know if his vaccinations are up to date. Social history is positive for some EtOH abuse. He’s here because he said he was vomiting blood for the past hour and passed out.”
“This is a 42-year-old man with a history of EtOH abuse, who reports drinking one liter of vodka per day, presenting with massive hemoptysis and syncope.”
2) ...but also, know when to say more.
Sometimes more detailed information is necessary in order to show the whole picture.“His vitals are within normal limits, and the exam is unremarkable except he has a little bit of abdominal tenderness. But it’s not rigid or anything.”
“He is tachycardic to 91 and blood pressure is 100/60 which is low for him since the last time he was here, his BP was consistently above 140 systolic on three separate readings. Abdominal exam is significant for epigastric tenderness without rebound or guarding.”
3) Synthesize information.
You’re a doctor now, not just a gatherer and reporter of information. You’ll be expected to not only know your patients, but also to think about what’s going on with them.“Labs are: sodium 140, potassium 3, chloride 100, bicarb 25, BUN 100, creatinine 3, glucose 120, hemoglobin 10…”
“Labs show acute kidney injury with a creatinine of 3.0, above his baseline of 1.3, and his hematocrit has dropped to 30 from 39 the last time he was here. Also of note, his MELD Score is 27, which correlates with a 3-month mortality of 19.6%".
1) Don’t bury the lede...
After taking a detailed history, the temptation is to convey all the information you have just discovered. Resist the temptation and get right to the point.“This is a patient who is a 42-year-old man with a history of hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, family history of lupus in a second cousin, and his neighbor’s dog-walker had a cough 10 years ago. He doesn’t know if his vaccinations are up to date. Social history is positive for some EtOH abuse. He’s here because he said he was vomiting blood for the past hour and passed out.”
“This is a 42-year-old man with a history of EtOH abuse, who reports drinking one liter of vodka per day, presenting with massive hemoptysis and syncope.”
2) ...but also, know when to say more.
Sometimes more detailed information is necessary in order to show the whole picture.“His vitals are within normal limits, and the exam is unremarkable except he has a little bit of abdominal tenderness. But it’s not rigid or anything.”
“He is tachycardic to 91 and blood pressure is 100/60 which is low for him since the last time he was here, his BP was consistently above 140 systolic on three separate readings. Abdominal exam is significant for epigastric tenderness without rebound or guarding.”
3) Synthesize information.
You’re a doctor now, not just a gatherer and reporter of information. You’ll be expected to not only know your patients, but also to think about what’s going on with them.“Labs are: sodium 140, potassium 3, chloride 100, bicarb 25, BUN 100, creatinine 3, glucose 120, hemoglobin 10…”
“Labs show acute kidney injury with a creatinine of 3.0, above his baseline of 1.3, and his hematocrit has dropped to 30 from 39 the last time he was here. Also of note, his MELD Score is 27, which correlates with a 3-month mortality of 19.6%".
1) Don’t bury the lede...
After taking a detailed history, the temptation is to convey all the information you have just discovered. Resist the temptation and get right to the point.“This is a patient who is a 42-year-old man with a history of hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, family history of lupus in a second cousin, and his neighbor’s dog-walker had a cough 10 years ago. He doesn’t know if his vaccinations are up to date. Social history is positive for some EtOH abuse. He’s here because he said he was vomiting blood for the past hour and passed out.”
“This is a 42-year-old man with a history of EtOH abuse, who reports drinking one liter of vodka per day, presenting with massive hemoptysis and syncope.”
2) ...but also, know when to say more.
Sometimes more detailed information is necessary in order to show the whole picture.“His vitals are within normal limits, and the exam is unremarkable except he has a little bit of abdominal tenderness. But it’s not rigid or anything.”
“He is tachycardic to 91 and blood pressure is 100/60 which is low for him since the last time he was here, his BP was consistently above 140 systolic on three separate readings. Abdominal exam is significant for epigastric tenderness without rebound or guarding.”
3) Synthesize information.
You’re a doctor now, not just a gatherer and reporter of information. You’ll be expected to not only know your patients, but also to think about what’s going on with them.“Labs are: sodium 140, potassium 3, chloride 100, bicarb 25, BUN 100, creatinine 3, glucose 120, hemoglobin 10…”
“Labs show acute kidney injury with a creatinine of 3.0, above his baseline of 1.3, and his hematocrit has dropped to 30 from 39 the last time he was here. Also of note, his MELD Score is 27, which correlates with a 3-month mortality of 19.6%".
Ophthalmology
For any consult: check the visual acuity. We often get consults for "eye pain" or "decreased vision", and an accurate visual acuity allows us to triage, and also provides us with a better idea of what is going on. (Regardless, we always check our own visual acuity when we see the patient.)
Assessing for acute glaucoma or a retrobulbar hemorrhage? Check an intraocular pressure (IOP) with the portable tonometer (Tonopen). It's pretty easy to use, but also easy to use incorrectly and thus provide an inaccurate intraocular pressure.
NYU Ophthalmology
Resident
Gastroenterology
How to work up a GI bleed (hematemesis, coffee ground emesis, melena, bright red blood per rectum) before calling GI to scope?UCLA Gastroenterology
Research Fellow
1. Is the patient stable? Securing the airway, supporting hemodynamics, and ensuring appropriate/adequate monitoring is the most important first step. It is not safe to go ahead with even considering endoscopy until this is taken care of.
2. What is the hemoglobin? GI is often called before a CBC is drawn. Having a hemoglobin is very important for our planning of when to do the endoscopy. It is helpful to know if the current Hgb is really different than their baseline (or a recent CBC).
3. INR and PTT should be drawn.
4. Is the patient on anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents?When was their last dose?
5. What is the nature of the bleeding? I'm much more worried about large volume hematemesis with instability compared to coffee ground emesis.
6. When did they last eat? This will also affect when the patient can be scoped. If there is significant bleeding, make them NPO right away.
7. Do they have comorbidities that could put them at increased risk of endoscopy (like significant cardiac or pulmonary disease) or that may give a clue as to the cause of their bleeding (i.e., variceal bleeding in cirrhotics)?
8. Has medical therapy (IV PPI, IV octreotide in variceal bleeding) been started?
Toxicology
NYU Toxicology
Fellow
Neurology
For acute stroke consults, if there's no in-house resident who can come to the bedside immediately, the most helpful pieces of info are as follows (ideally the whole presentation should take a few minutes):Mount Sinai Stroke Neurologist
Clinical Informaticist
1. Age and sex.
2. Super brief medical history, especially previous stroke and residual neuro sequelae that might help the neurologist differentiate mimic vs. stroke.
3. Last known well time (LKW) - this is the single most important detail - and how the information was obtained (e.g. witnessed, or last known well).
4. Brief presenting symptoms (e.g. "right-sided weakness and aphasia").
5. NIHSS Score and what deficits patient was given points on scale for.
6. If patient is tPA candidate: whether or not any contraindications to tPA exist, like history of ICH or on warfarin.
7. CT head and or CTA/CTP results
8. If CTA results, whether there is a proximal LVO or not*.
9. If CTP results, location and size (volume) of the penumbra and core infarcts, and whether there is a mismatch between the two**.
Neurology cont.
Ideally, the conversation should be held with the neurologist as the patient is rolling through the CT scanner so that tPA can be given as immediately as possible after a negative CT scan (for bleeding), and if CTA is necessary, tPA should be given in the scanner, obviously institutional parameters allowing, followed by CTA.
*Trials have demonstrated efficacy in proximal LVOs and not distal, as well as the location of the LVO if present (e.g. "left M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery").
**Most of the time this will be read-out by a neuroradiologist (e.g. "perfusion imaging shows an acute infarct of X mL over the anterior L MCA territory with large surrounding penumbra"). Generally speaking (and this is not 100% academically rigorous) patients with large penumbra-to-core mismatch presenting <24 hours from LKW are deemed to be interventional neuroradiology candidates. More specifically, there are cut-offs for size for the core and penumbra that constitute who is a good candidate/not but I would leave that to the neurologist/INR specialist.
Ophthalmology
For any consult: check the visual acuity. We often get consults for "eye pain" or "decreased vision", and an accurate visual acuity allows us to triage, and also provides us with a better idea of what is going on. (Regardless, we always check our own visual acuity when we see the patient.)
Assessing for acute glaucoma or a retrobulbar hemorrhage? Check an intraocular pressure (IOP) with the portable tonometer (Tonopen). It's pretty easy to use, but also easy to use incorrectly and thus provide an inaccurate intraocular pressure.
NYU Ophthalmology
Resident
Gastroenterology
How to work up a GI bleed (hematemesis, coffee ground emesis, melena, bright red blood per rectum) before calling GI to scope?UCLA Gastroenterology
Research Fellow
1. Is the patient stable? Securing the airway, supporting hemodynamics, and ensuring appropriate/adequate monitoring is the most important first step. It is not safe to go ahead with even considering endoscopy until this is taken care of.
2. What is the hemoglobin? GI is often called before a CBC is drawn. Having a hemoglobin is very important for our planning of when to do the endoscopy. It is helpful to know if the current Hgb is really different than their baseline (or a recent CBC).
3. INR and PTT should be drawn.
4. Is the patient on anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents?When was their last dose?
5. What is the nature of the bleeding? I'm much more worried about large volume hematemesis with instability compared to coffee ground emesis.
6. When did they last eat? This will also affect when the patient can be scoped. If there is significant bleeding, make them NPO right away.
7. Do they have comorbidities that could put them at increased risk of endoscopy (like significant cardiac or pulmonary disease) or that may give a clue as to the cause of their bleeding (i.e., variceal bleeding in cirrhotics)?
8. Has medical therapy (IV PPI, IV octreotide in variceal bleeding) been started?
Toxicology
NYU Toxicology
Fellow
Neurology
For acute stroke consults, if there's no in-house resident who can come to the bedside immediately, the most helpful pieces of info are as follows (ideally the whole presentation should take a few minutes):Mount Sinai Stroke Neurologist
Clinical Informaticist
1. Age and sex.
2. Super brief medical history, especially previous stroke and residual neuro sequelae that might help the neurologist differentiate mimic vs. stroke.
3. Last known well time (LKW) - this is the single most important detail - and how the information was obtained (e.g. witnessed, or last known well).
4. Brief presenting symptoms (e.g. "right-sided weakness and aphasia").
5. NIHSS Score and what deficits patient was given points on scale for.
6. If patient is tPA candidate: whether or not any contraindications to tPA exist, like history of ICH or on warfarin.
7. CT head and or CTA/CTP results
8. If CTA results, whether there is a proximal LVO or not*.
9. If CTP results, location and size (volume) of the penumbra and core infarcts, and whether there is a mismatch between the two**.
Neurology cont.
Ideally, the conversation should be held with the neurologist as the patient is rolling through the CT scanner so that tPA can be given as immediately as possible after a negative CT scan (for bleeding), and if CTA is necessary, tPA should be given in the scanner, obviously institutional parameters allowing, followed by CTA.
*Trials have demonstrated efficacy in proximal LVOs and not distal, as well as the location of the LVO if present (e.g. "left M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery").
**Most of the time this will be read-out by a neuroradiologist (e.g. "perfusion imaging shows an acute infarct of X mL over the anterior L MCA territory with large surrounding penumbra"). Generally speaking (and this is not 100% academically rigorous) patients with large penumbra-to-core mismatch presenting <24 hours from LKW are deemed to be interventional neuroradiology candidates. More specifically, there are cut-offs for size for the core and penumbra that constitute who is a good candidate/not but I would leave that to the neurologist/INR specialist.
Ophthalmology
For any consult: check the visual acuity. We often get consults for "eye pain" or "decreased vision", and an accurate visual acuity allows us to triage, and also provides us with a better idea of what is going on. (Regardless, we always check our own visual acuity when we see the patient.)
Assessing for acute glaucoma or a retrobulbar hemorrhage? Check an intraocular pressure (IOP) with the portable tonometer (Tonopen). It's pretty easy to use, but also easy to use incorrectly and thus provide an inaccurate intraocular pressure.
NYU Ophthalmology
Resident
Gastroenterology
How to work up a GI bleed (hematemesis, coffee ground emesis, melena, bright red blood per rectum) before calling GI to scope?UCLA Gastroenterology
Research Fellow
1. Is the patient stable? Securing the airway, supporting hemodynamics, and ensuring appropriate/adequate monitoring is the most important first step. It is not safe to go ahead with even considering endoscopy until this is taken care of.
2. What is the hemoglobin? GI is often called before a CBC is drawn. Having a hemoglobin is very important for our planning of when to do the endoscopy. It is helpful to know if the current Hgb is really different than their baseline (or a recent CBC).
3. INR and PTT should be drawn.
4. Is the patient on anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents?When was their last dose?
5. What is the nature of the bleeding? I'm much more worried about large volume hematemesis with instability compared to coffee ground emesis.
6. When did they last eat? This will also affect when the patient can be scoped. If there is significant bleeding, make them NPO right away.
7. Do they have comorbidities that could put them at increased risk of endoscopy (like significant cardiac or pulmonary disease) or that may give a clue as to the cause of their bleeding (i.e., variceal bleeding in cirrhotics)?
8. Has medical therapy (IV PPI, IV octreotide in variceal bleeding) been started?
Toxicology
NYU Toxicology
Fellow
Neurology
For acute stroke consults, if there's no in-house resident who can come to the bedside immediately, the most helpful pieces of info are as follows (ideally the whole presentation should take a few minutes):Mount Sinai Stroke Neurologist
Clinical Informaticist
1. Age and sex.
2. Super brief medical history, especially previous stroke and residual neuro sequelae that might help the neurologist differentiate mimic vs. stroke.
3. Last known well time (LKW) - this is the single most important detail - and how the information was obtained (e.g. witnessed, or last known well).
4. Brief presenting symptoms (e.g. "right-sided weakness and aphasia").
5. NIHSS Score and what deficits patient was given points on scale for.
6. If patient is tPA candidate: whether or not any contraindications to tPA exist, like history of ICH or on warfarin.
7. CT head and or CTA/CTP results
8. If CTA results, whether there is a proximal LVO or not*.
9. If CTP results, location and size (volume) of the penumbra and core infarcts, and whether there is a mismatch between the two**.
Neurology cont.
Ideally, the conversation should be held with the neurologist as the patient is rolling through the CT scanner so that tPA can be given as immediately as possible after a negative CT scan (for bleeding), and if CTA is necessary, tPA should be given in the scanner, obviously institutional parameters allowing, followed by CTA.
*Trials have demonstrated efficacy in proximal LVOs and not distal, as well as the location of the LVO if present (e.g. "left M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery").
**Most of the time this will be read-out by a neuroradiologist (e.g. "perfusion imaging shows an acute infarct of X mL over the anterior L MCA territory with large surrounding penumbra"). Generally speaking (and this is not 100% academically rigorous) patients with large penumbra-to-core mismatch presenting <24 hours from LKW are deemed to be interventional neuroradiology candidates. More specifically, there are cut-offs for size for the core and penumbra that constitute who is a good candidate/not but I would leave that to the neurologist/INR specialist.
Emergency Department
A 41 year old man walks into the emergency room with chest pain…Chief Complaint | Ways of Thinking | DDx | Related Tools |
Chest Pain | This MDCalc co-founder worked with EMRA to create a chief-complaint based diagnosis guide. It helps newbies create a broad ddx focused on the worst and common diagnosis. |
|
|
Tests to obtain: Chest X-Ray, EKG, D-dimer |
Inpatient Medicine
The patient has a normal EKG and chest X-Ray, a negative troponin, but a positive D-Dimer. A pulmonary embolism is diagnosed by CT. and the patient is admitted to the internal medicine service…Disease | Ways of Thinking | Monitor | Related Tools |
Pulmonary Embolism | Now that a diagnosis was made, we should think about the prognosis of the disease, and the probability of bad sequelae. This can help guide our management. |
|
|
Potential Patient Downfalls: Internal bleeding due to anti-coagulation meds; Submassive PE causing heart failure or death; Hospital Acquired Infection (e.g., Pneumonia, Sepsis) |
Intensive Care Unit
After the PE is successfully treated, the patient spikes a fever, and eventually pneumonia is diagnosed. The patient is screened for sepsis with qSOFA and is transferred to the ICU...Disease | Ways of Thinking | Monitor | Related Tools |
| The definition of sepsis and severe sepsis is always changing, as are the most up to date ways to workup, monitor and treat these high-mortality patients. |
|
|
Potential Patient Downfalls: Organ Failure, Death |
Emergency Department
A 41 year old man walks into the emergency room with chest pain…Chief Complaint | Ways of Thinking | DDx | Related Tools |
Chest Pain | This MDCalc co-founder worked with EMRA to create a chief-complaint based diagnosis guide. It helps newbies create a broad ddx focused on the worst and common diagnosis. |
|
|
Tests to obtain: Chest X-Ray, EKG, D-dimer |
Inpatient Medicine
The patient has a normal EKG and chest X-Ray, a negative troponin, but a positive D-Dimer. A pulmonary embolism is diagnosed by CT. and the patient is admitted to the internal medicine service…Disease | Ways of Thinking | Monitor | Related Tools |
Pulmonary Embolism | Now that a diagnosis was made, we should think about the prognosis of the disease, and the probability of bad sequelae. This can help guide our management. |
|
|
Potential Patient Downfalls: Internal bleeding due to anti-coagulation meds; Submassive PE causing heart failure or death; Hospital Acquired Infection (e.g., Pneumonia, Sepsis) |
Intensive Care Unit
After the PE is successfully treated, the patient spikes a fever, and eventually pneumonia is diagnosed. The patient is screened for sepsis with qSOFA and is transferred to the ICU...Disease | Ways of Thinking | Monitor | Related Tools |
| The definition of sepsis and severe sepsis is always changing, as are the most up to date ways to workup, monitor and treat these high-mortality patients. |
|
|
Potential Patient Downfalls: Organ Failure, Death |
Emergency Department
A 41 year old man walks into the emergency room with chest pain…Chief Complaint | Ways of Thinking | DDx | Related Tools |
Chest Pain | This MDCalc co-founder worked with EMRA to create a chief-complaint based diagnosis guide. It helps newbies create a broad ddx focused on the worst and common diagnosis. |
|
|
Tests to obtain: Chest X-Ray, EKG, D-dimer |
Inpatient Medicine
The patient has a normal EKG and chest X-Ray, a negative troponin, but a positive D-Dimer. A pulmonary embolism is diagnosed by CT. and the patient is admitted to the internal medicine service…Disease | Ways of Thinking | Monitor | Related Tools |
Pulmonary Embolism | Now that a diagnosis was made, we should think about the prognosis of the disease, and the probability of bad sequelae. This can help guide our management. |
|
|
Potential Patient Downfalls: Internal bleeding due to anti-coagulation meds; Submassive PE causing heart failure or death; Hospital Acquired Infection (e.g., Pneumonia, Sepsis) |
Intensive Care Unit
After the PE is successfully treated, the patient spikes a fever, and eventually pneumonia is diagnosed. The patient is screened for sepsis with qSOFA and is transferred to the ICU...Disease | Ways of Thinking | Monitor | Related Tools |
| The definition of sepsis and severe sepsis is always changing, as are the most up to date ways to workup, monitor and treat these high-mortality patients. |
|
|
Potential Patient Downfalls: Organ Failure, Death |
“Brilliant friend on speed dial”
Chief Resident
NYU Langone,
Emergency Department
Preparing for clinical rotations
Resident
NYU Langone,
Emergency Department
“Brilliant friend on speed dial”
Chief Resident
NYU Langone,
Emergency Department
Preparing for clinical rotations
Resident
NYU Langone,
Emergency Department
“Brilliant friend on speed dial”
Chief Resident
NYU Langone,
Emergency Department
Preparing for clinical rotations
Resident
NYU Langone,
Emergency Department
The beginning
In 2005, Graham was inspired to start MDCalc while in medical school. He realized that memorizing esoteric criteria, scores, and equations — instead of focusing on patient care — seemed like a poor use of a physician’s time, energy, and brainpower. He wanted to create a provider-centric resource that could improve efficiency and make a physician’s work a little bit easier. Graham met Joe during their emergency medicine residencies in New York City, and they decided to work together to improve the breadth and depth of MDCalc.
MDCalc President and co-founder
MDCalc CEO and co-founder
Today
Over the last 10+ years, MDCalc has evolved into the #1 medical reference for clinical decision tools and content used by over one million medical professionals globally, including more than 50% of US physicians, every month.
Today, MDCalc is a platform that provides practical EBM tools, on multiple devices and integrated into the daily workflow, to support medical professionals in providing more efficient, evidence-based care to patients.
The beginning
In 2005, Graham was inspired to start MDCalc while in medical school. He realized that memorizing esoteric criteria, scores, and equations — instead of focusing on patient care — seemed like a poor use of a physician’s time, energy, and brainpower. He wanted to create a provider-centric resource that could improve efficiency and make a physician’s work a little bit easier. Graham met Joe during their emergency medicine residencies in New York City, and they decided to work together to improve the breadth and depth of MDCalc.
MDCalc President and co-founder
MDCalc CEO and co-founder
Today
Over the last 10+ years, MDCalc has evolved into the #1 medical reference for clinical decision tools and content used by over one million medical professionals globally, including more than 50% of US physicians, every month.
Today, MDCalc is a platform that provides practical EBM tools, on multiple devices and integrated into the daily workflow, to support medical professionals in providing more efficient, evidence-based care to patients.
The beginning
In 2005, Graham was inspired to start MDCalc while in medical school. He realized that memorizing esoteric criteria, scores, and equations — instead of focusing on patient care — seemed like a poor use of a physician’s time, energy, and brainpower. He wanted to create a provider-centric resource that could improve efficiency and make a physician’s work a little bit easier. Graham met Joe during their emergency medicine residencies in New York City, and they decided to work together to improve the breadth and depth of MDCalc.
MDCalc President and co-founder
MDCalc CEO and co-founder
Today
Over the last 10+ years, MDCalc has evolved into the #1 medical reference for clinical decision tools and content used by over one million medical professionals globally, including more than 50% of US physicians, every month.
Today, MDCalc is a platform that provides practical EBM tools, on multiple devices and integrated into the daily workflow, to support medical professionals in providing more efficient, evidence-based care to patients.