Although the scientific knowledge on drug dosing in obesity and after bariatric surgery is expanding, healthcare professionals still have to rely on studies detailing the behavior of individual drugs in obese patients.
We are maintaining a Phacet.info knowledge base that eventually will contain all relevant publication abstracts and many open access publications on this topic from the year 2000 till today. All documents are sorted on disorder and generic drug (class) name, allowing you to find specific information quickly. We are making this knowledge base available to healthcare professionals.
You can apply for a free subscription to this knowledge base by sending an e-mail message to support@phacet.com (make sure that you allow replies from this address inside your mail application). Your e-mail message should be sent from your professional mail account, we will not honor requests from personal domains or bulk domains (such as gmail.com, hotmail.com etc.). Your e-mail address will become your login username.
Please state the following information in your request: your given name, your family name, your job title, the name of your healthcare institute.
If we accept your application, we will return a password allowing you to access our knowledge base server.
Once logged in, you can open the HELP document explaining how to quickly find the information searched for. We will also provide short live webinars on a regular basis.
We will NOT share your personal information with anyone outside our company. We do not use cookies and we will NOT track your online behavior while you are using our knowledge base server, not even the number of times you logged in.
If you wish to support us, please convince your healthcare institute to subscribe to our services. We can create a Phacet.info knowledge base for your institute that makes several of our information collections, including this one, available to you and your colleagues. It also provides a shared space in which you and your colleagues can store your own books, articles, internet hyperlinks, guidelines, and (possibly reusable) solutions to clinical problems.