This great-value pack offers students a definitive resource on clinical medicine.
Recenzijos
Created initially from a medical students final revision notes. Concise, balanced, practical and plastic-covered to repel unmentionable liquids and yet containing enough humility and humanity for its voice to be that of a supportive experienced friend rather than a critical professor. * Professor Max Watson, eHospice * Review from previous edition The bees' knees of medicine. . . A brilliant all-round book. * The Student Room * Incredibly helpful in almost all situations, information well laid out and easy to find, engaging to read ... useful asides to aid memorisation, essential algorithms/reference intervals helpfully situated on front and back inside covers; a generally excellent and clearly very well-thought-out book. * Tom Dalton, University of Birmingham, UK * I very much appreciated the very human and caring aspect it brings to clinical medicine, it's lovely to have the dry, biomedical material broken up with humorous, motivational and touching stories. * Sam Siljee, University of Otago, New Zealand * THE best book that a medical student could ever use. Everything is so easy to find, and is just enough depth for me! * Alexander Wibberley, 3rd year medical student, University of Leeds * Like many other students I use the book as a quick reference/recall and revision tool, and for that it is (for lack of a better word) perfect. Every medical student in their clinical years should own one of these, and I think most of them already do! If you don't you are missing out. * Paddy Green, almostadoctor.co.uk *
Oxford Handbook of Medicine 11th edition1. Thinking About Medicine2. History and Examination3. Cardiovascular Medicine4. Chest Medicine5. Endocrinology6. Gastroenterology7. Kidney Medicine8. Haematology9. Infectious Diseases10. Neurology11. Oncology and Palliative Care12. Rheumatology13. Surgery14. Clinical Chemistry15. Eponymous Syndromes16. Radiology17. Reference Intervals18. Practical Procedures19. EmergenciesOxford Assess and Progress: Clinical Medicine 4th edition1. Cardiovascular medicine2. Chest medicine3. Endocrinology4. Gastroenterology5. Renal medicine6. Haematology7. Infectious Diseases8. Neurology9. Oncology and palliative care10. Rheumatology11. Surgery12. Clinical chemistry13. Eponymous syndromes14. Radiology15. Emergencies16. Geriatric medicine
Ian Wilkinson is Professor of Therapeutics at the University of Cambridge and an Honorary Consultant Physician at Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge, UK
Tim Raine is a Consultant Gastroenterologist at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, UK
Kate Wiles is an Obstetric Nephrologist at Kings College London, London, UK
Peter Hateley, Foundation doctor Year 2, Yeovil District Hospital, Severn Deanery
Dearbhla Kelly is an academic nephrologist working as a postdoctoral research fellow at the Philip Kistler Stroke Research Center within the Department of Neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital
Iain McGurgan, Clinical Fellow in Neurovascular Disease, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford
Dan Furmedge MBBS MSc FRCP DLM DRCOG RCPathM FHEA AKC, Consultant Physician in Geriatric & Internal Medicine, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation?Trust; and Honorary Senior Clinical Lecturer, Kings College London London, UK
Rudy Sinharay MBChB MRCP(UK) MD(Res), Consultant Physician in Respiratory & General Internal Medicine, St Mary's Hospital, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, UK