A different way of presenting general medicine. Very useful for revising and recapping. Good for referring to the particular symptom and look at what the possible differential diagnosis are. A book I would recommend for medical students doing final year and house officers
Strengths:
Concise.
Good revision tool.
Easy to refer back to a particular disease through index.
A fresh view of general medicine by ‘symptoms’.
Weaknesses:
Tables could be better presented.
No revision questions at end of chapter (might make it more enticing to buy as a revision
tool if there were a few questions at end of each chapter)....
There have been many attempts to fill the void that exists in medical education for the ultimate USMLE preparation guide. The perfect book would be simple enough for those not familiar with the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE), while providing enough material that the American medical graduate could gain the skills to effectively prepare for the USMLE Step 2 CS...
Beyond Borders is a concise but hugely incitive book written by a 5th year medical student from Australia called Hamish Graham. He used the extensive knowledge and experience he built up on his numerous health placements to developing countries to write this book, which is an essential companion to anyone thinking of organising a medical elective; especially if the intended destination is very different to your own...
Cranial Nerves in Health and Disease (L. Wilson-Pauwels)
By Craig, FY1 Doctor, London
I personally feel this new version of Lasts (11th edition) is significantly more readable than the previous edition I read (which I think was the 8th edition, borrowed from the library back in 2002, after being recommended it by a surgical registra).
I found this prior version a little hard to follow, not because there was anything wrong with the content, but because the layout and diagrams were so dull - and in a subject like anatomy, which requires focused attention to learn large amounts of detailed information, this was a real problem.....
By Herman, Medical Student, Universiteit van Amsterdam
...In my opinion the whole ‘introduction to cancer/oncology’ is not extensive enough. Also I think there is a lack of clinical relevance of findings and treatment aspects. For example many types cancer are discussed, but the clinical relevance of these is less well represented. This book could be made more interesting for medical-students by giving more clinical information eg by having text boxes with important clinical findings...
Orthopaedic examination, evaluation & intervention/ a pocket handbook
By Herman, Universiteit van Amsterdam
As a pocket handbook it seems very important to me that the information is given as compact and short as possible. Clinical information is less important in a handbook. This book doesn’t give too much clinical information and that’s just right in my opinion.
I think the chapters aren’t as well organised as expected for a pocket handbook. Information is hard to find. I found schemes and tables inconsistent with too much text and explanationss.....