BiliCalc 12+

Jacob Beniflah, MD

Designed for iPhone

    • 3.0 • 24 Ratings
    • $1.99

iPhone Screenshots

Description

Designed by a pediatrician, BiliCalc uses the American Academy of Pediatrics 2004 "Management of Hyperbilirubinemia in Infants Greater than 35 Weeks of Age" to calculate the threshold for starting phototherapy based on the patient's age, bilirubin level, and neurotoxicity risk. Values are now displayed on the phototherapy nomogram. In addition, it will also tell you the patient's risk zone using the Bhutani Nomogram.

Allows direct age input and includes the option to calculate age from birth and lab sample times. The app has a direct link to source journal articles, nomograms, and a list of the neurotoxicity risk factors. Supports US and SI units (mg/dL and µmol/L).

App Feature Summary
-Calculates phototherapy threshold for newborns 35 weeks and older
-Displays values on phototherapy nomogram
-Suggests time frame for followup bilirubin levels based on patient risk zone
-Direct links to reference journal articles

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Frequently Asked Questions
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1. I think the graph is backwards. Why is low risk on top and high risk on bottom?

The graph is directly from the 2004 AAP Hyperbilirubinemia Guidelines. The degree of "risk" refers to the infant's risk for developing neurotoxicity. This is different than the Bhutani Nomogram in which "risk" refers to the risk for development of severe hyperbilirubinemia. The threshold for treatment (when a data point lies above one of the lines on the graph) of the infant is different based on the predisposing factors (divided into the three risk categories). Babies who are "low neurotoxicity risk," can tolerate higher levels of bilirubin than a baby with medium or high risk. Therefore, a high risk baby will be treated at lower bilirubin levels than a low risk baby. The graph is correct in having low risk on top since a higher value is needed to pass the threshold for treatment (phototherapy). Please see the graph here for verification as well: http://bit.ly/AppPWU. Please email if you have further questions.

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Intended for use by pediatricians, neonatologists, physicians, medical students, and pediatric nurses who treat newborn infants in the hospital and as outpatients.

BiliCalc should be used only as a reference aid. The information contained in the app should not be used as a substitute for the exercise of professional clinical judgement. Please contact the developer if you find any errors.

Keywords: bilitool, bilitool.org, jaundice, hyperbiliubinemia

What’s New

Version 2.8

This app has been updated by Apple to display the Apple Watch app icon.

Fixed the bug causing incorrect point plotting with the full screen graphs. (Occurring in iOS 8+ only)

Ratings and Reviews

3.0 out of 5
24 Ratings

24 Ratings

Afsheen MD ,

Updated guidelines 2022

I recently bought the app not realizing that it does not have the updated 2022 guide limes , can the app be updated ?

Pgh Light'n ,

Excellent app, update due

This excellent resource needs to be updated to reflect the recent guidelines for managing hyperbilirubinemia in infants 35 weeks gestation and older

Allancano ,

Out of date

This was a great tool, but unfortunately now completely out of date. Would be great if updated but appears the creator hasn’t changed it in 9 years

App Privacy

The developer, Jacob Beniflah, MD, has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple.

No Details Provided

The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.

Supports

  • Family Sharing

    Up to six family members can use this app with Family Sharing enabled.

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