Preparation Books


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Preparation Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Preparation
An Aid to Radiology for the MRCP
Published in Paperback by Wiley-Blackwell (2000-01-15)
Authors: K. K. Ray, Robert E. J. Ryder, and R. M. Wellings
List price: $59.95
New price: $55.03
Used price: $26.00

Average review score:

On your way to the MRCP.....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-16
Very well planned book, with adequate coverage of most of the pathologies encountered while preparing for the MRCP examination. Substantiated by very good teaching points.

Preparation
AIDS to Undergraduate Medicine
Published in Paperback by Churchill Livingstone (1997-11)
Author: John Lloyd Burton
List price: $32.95
Used price: $49.99

Average review score:

a must-have for all medical students
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-04
Definitely a MUST-HAVE. Everything about this book is excellent. It's small, easy to carry around and has exactly what you need to know for OSCE-type exams. Its point-form lay-out allows you to put together what you've read in several different chapters from a textbook, according to clinical findings and differentials. Highly, highly recommended!

Preparation
The American Farm Book: A Practical Treatise on Every Staple Product of the United States, with the Best Methods of Planting, Cultivating, and Preparation for Market
Published in Paperback by The Lyons Press (2002-05-01)
Author: R.L. Allen
List price: $12.95
New price: $6.78
Used price: $6.78

Average review score:

Highly recommend no matter where you live
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-16
Even if you're not a farmer, this is a great book to help understand how far we've come from sustainable farming practices and what we need to do to get back to a more kind and gentler assault on Mother Earth. Down with the mega farms, seek out and know your local farmer, buy her goods and help the cycle of renewal instead of destruction.

A Good Introduction to Farming
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-25
I pastor a church in a rural area, so I felt that it was in my best interests to learn a little bit about the chosen profession of some of my parishioners.

I was surprised by how interesting this book was and how practical and wise the counsel is 160 years after it was first written. The author begins with a discussion of the different kinds of soils in North America (rocky, clay, alluvial, light, dark, etc). He talks about how spreading manure or lime or charcoal or crushed bones on the soil can go a long way toward its resuscitation and/or continued fertility.

In the section on irrigation, the author favors underdraining to get rid of excess water. He notes that creating ditches and reservoirs are occasionally the best way to go, but he cautions against this in most instances because it will use up precious soil that could be used for planting and growing.

There is also a section on the different kinds of grass in the country. There is also a relevant section on how to grow sugar cane, cotton, oats, grain, corn, fruit, roots, and others products.

The author also discusses rotation crops and shade trees and how to build adequate farm buildings.

Some of the material in the book is dated, especially when the author talks about plows and harrows that are no longer used today. But most of what is here seems to be good, sane advice for the farmer. Recommended.

Preparation
American Red Cross Nurse Assistant Review Manual : Preparation for Testing
Published in Paperback by (2005)
Author: American Red Cross
List price:

Average review score:

Must have!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-10
anyone who is preparing for there Nursing Assistant test should have this book. I helped me so much. I passed my test with lots of help from this book!

Preparation
Anatomical Chart Company's Illustrated Pocket Anatomy: Muscular and Skeletal Systems Study Guide (Anatomical Chart Company's Illustrated Pocket Anatomy)
Published in Wall Chart by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (2003-03-01)
Author:
List price: $199.00
New price: $199.00

Average review score:

Great visual for memorizing muscles and bones.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-26
This helped me a lot to memorize the muscles and bones in the body for my A and P classes in college. The pictures are of very good quality. If you want great questions that are like college anatomy and physiology test questions, get:

Anatomy and Physiology Study Guide: Key Review Questions and Answers with Explanations Volume 1 and Volume 2
These 2 study guides helped me so much on my tests. It gave me a clue as to what was important and what wasn't. This cut my study time down. However, the pictures in Illustrated pocket anatomy are needed when first learning A and P.

Preparation
Anatomy (Mosby's Crash Course)
Published in Paperback by Mosby Ltd. (2002-12)
Author: Michael Dykes
List price: $35.95
New price: $31.16
Used price: $12.00

Average review score:

This is the best book of Anatomy that exist.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-28
This is the best book in Anatomy. Don't loss your time studing from a book like Clinically Oriented Anatomy by Moore, because this book is very bad. I studied from the Crash course of Anatomy to my anatomy final exam and with this one I get the best grade in my class. This book makes that you don't buy any other anatomy book

Preparation
Anatomy: Pretest Self-Assessment and Review (Delete (PreTest: Basic Sciences))
Published in Paperback by Mcgraw-Hill (Tx) (1995-10)
Author:
List price: $17.95
Used price: $3.47

Average review score:

Excellent!!!!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-10
Excellent book to quiz yourself with. Filled with great clinical questions to keep you on your toes. Perfect to study up for tests, quizzes and even for the boards themselves.

Preparation
Anatomy: Review for USMLE, Step 1, Third Edition
Published in Paperback by J & S Publishing Company, Inc. (2005-08-01)
Authors: Kurt E. Johnson, Frank J. Slaby, and Ronald C. Bohn
List price: $39.95
New price: $35.96
Used price: $38.35

Average review score:

Anatomy and Histology: The Basis of Medicine
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-04
Instrumental to any review textbook is the ability to comprehensively review fundamental concepts while at the same time maintaining brevity and exactitude. Equally important, is a clinical review textbook that presents in lucid detail subject matter from histology and cell biology (microanatomy), Gross Anatomy, Neuroanatomy and Embryology in the first year medical school curriculum in a way that encompasses the material learned during the second year which is more clinically inclined. Anatomy: Review for USMLE, Step 1 Third Edition by Drs. Johnson, Slaby and Bohn of the faculty of the George Washington University School of Medicine is such a book.
Dr. Johnson's review of anatomy for students has been put together in a modular organization, whereby the student can choose the order he/she wishes to follow and still receive the material in a solid and graspable fashion. The premise that solidifies mastery of the various topics is in applying the anatomy to solve clinical problems. This technique of "applied anatomy" gives students a keen perspective of the various aspects involved in caring for patients from a variety of age groups and with vast conditions. Furthermore, the complement of tables, diagrams, and schematics with questions analyzing them allows students a sense of active involvement. In addition, the book is full of state of the art clinical images, including MRI, CT scans, and hi-quality radiographs.
This review guide brings the knowledge of three true experts that have dedicated their career to teaching and pedagogy together with a clinical focus for medical students. Having the privilege of being a 2nd year medical student at the G.W.U. School of Medicine and taking the Histology course taught by Dr. Johnson, Gross Anatomy with Dr. Slaby, and Neuroanatomy with Dr. Bohn was the convincing force in purchasing this text for me. The key secret to mastering this material is to build a strong basic understanding, or framework, on which you can build on in the future as a physician. Dr. Johnson's success in the classroom and in this amazing review text is the way in which he weaves the facts together, presents them in a concise fashion, and places them in the perfect clinical context.
Various human ailments and diseases, congenital or acquired, from retinoblastoma to hereditary spherocytosis are presented in line with anatomical subject matter. For example, the histology and cell biology portion of this anatomy review begins with a clinical scenario of repeated respiratory tract infections and thick mucous secretions in a young patient. From there, a series of questions drawing upon various levels of understanding are presented. No worries if you miss any question, because each series of question items is followed by an in-depth organized mini-tutorial with answers! The explanations are organized to provide as much detail as you the student needs. Generally, each clinical scenario is deciphered as to epidemiology, molecular genetics, in-depth anatomical review of essential elements, and a conclusive paragraph with more fascinating details if time permits. It is this presentation of the material in a sound clinical and molecular genetic fashion that really sets this review text apart from the others out there!
The evolution of the human, from embryo to fetus to neonate is so illustratively dissected. Topics ranging from ectopic pregnancies to pharyngeal arch malformations, and the most common congenital anomalies (trisomy 13, 18, 21) are discussed with brevity and clarity to get the main trigger points across. Importantly, any review text must not only explain and get across the common principles of a concept, but also highlight the subtleties that may be overlooked by students studying for lengthy examinations such as the USMLE. This is exactly what Dr. Johnson's anatomy review does throughout the chapters. For instance, pointing out to students that while an ectopic pregnancy is defined as "anywhere outside the uterine cavity," placenta previa is not an ectopic pregnancy due to the fact that both placenta and fetus are "within the uterus."
The topic of neural tube defects is re-introduced to students with a well-known example of encephalocele shown with ultrasonography. Next, based on that example appropriate diagnostic texts are highlighted. With this specific example, the module also presents variants of NTDs with their clinical severity. The ability to connect significance medically based on structure/functional relationships is clearly without question exemplary in this book. The author's really drill the body's inter-connectedness by addressing how everything works together. It is spectacular that while brevity is maintained the material is solid and effectual for developing a strong background as a future physician. How is this accomplished? Seemingly by the author's ability to understand what is really important to physicians in a broad sense and then working backwards to give the necessary insight to explain what things mean to physician's patients in terms of management, treatment and prognosis.
What's the difference between a tumor above or below the pectinate line? As the author's show, because of the different derivations of the tissue above and below the pectinate line (endoderm vs. ectoderm) the same cancer can present differently with an exclusive prognosis of its own. So given the cancer's origin, it could be clinically silent, painless, and more detrimental based strictly on location. You need to read this interesting case to find out exactly what I'm talking about.
The module on Gross Anatomy does a really terrific job of making anatomy simple to understand with the use of figures and diagrams including labels that put structures/organs into perspective with necessary and sufficient review. Recall of anatomical structures is repeatedly questioned. Certain questions draw from the figures and test your understanding of regional and surface anatomy. Importantly, as throughout the review book, the significance of the body's connections, in this case lymphatic drainage, is accentuated with relevance to disease location/nature. One of the strongest aspects of the anatomy section is the illumination of the workings of the brachial plexus, divided into upper and lower brachial plexus injuries. The authors present ten sites of injury within the plexus supported with excellent diagrams that explain clinically important injuries. Moreover, the muscles of the upper/lower extremities, many in number, are presented in an easy to learn fashion. Diagrams of the brachial plexus and sources of innervation with the muscles involved are presented systematically, sprinkled with clinical scenarios to flavor things up. This section proved to be very insightful and suites those interested in a through review of this important anatomical landmark.
The Neuroanatomy chapter was a splendid delight because it was able to bring together everything that I'd learned in neuroanatomy. The inclusion of sagittal and coronal MRIs (labeled) of the human brain, with accompanying drawings of the intact brain really helped this section flow with ease and enjoyment. What I found very satisfying educationally was the depiction of spinal cord lesions such as the famous Brown-Séquard syndrome, with emphasis of major neurological findings of this and many more abnormalities. The neuroanatomy section will give medical students a very sturdy base to prepare for the boards.
In closing, I would have to say this anatomy review book is a really worthy addition to any physician's library. It is one I would recommend to any colleague of mine. It really has to do with the writer's who have an extensive background in the sciences and the practice of medicine. Given that the future of medicine is personalized: placing the entire genome of a patient on a tiny microchip, I would definitely recommend this text to current medical students preparing for USMLE Step 1 and to physicians already in the field to enhance their understanding of medicine as it is becoming.
By,

M.J. Hajjar-Nejad, MSII
The George Washington University School of Medicine

Preparation
Anesthesia Review: A Study Guide to Anesthesia and Basics of Anesthesia
Published in Paperback by Churchill Livingstone (2001-03-16)
Authors: Lorraine M. Sdrales, Ronald D. Miller, and Churchill Livingstone
List price: $75.00
New price: $56.00
Used price: $55.00

Average review score:

Thought-stimulating
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-13
I really like this book. Its design is atypical for a "question-book" in that the format is not multiple choice; rather, the author(s) intend for the reader to reflect upon their theoretical and practical knowledge-base before formulating an answer. This makes this book thought-stimulating as opposed to standard multiple choice books, which may be good, but you will most assuridly never see those "same" multiple choice questions and answer-options replicated on an actual board exam. Good book.

Preparation
Anesthesiology Boards: A Survival Guide
Published in Paperback by Churchill Livingstone (1999-09-09)
Author: Michelle Starr
List price: $65.00
New price: $302.08
Used price: $90.20

Average review score:

Mistake
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-03
Well, this is not a review of the book, but I want to tell you that the image under the title does not correspond to the book. You better correct it before more customer are prevented to buy the book. Do I qualify for a 50 $ gift certificate? Thanks, Andrea Torri, M.D.


Books-Under-Review-->Recreation-->Travel-->Preparation-->44
Related Subjects: Health Passports and Visas Software Tips Customs and Etiquette Computers and Internet Packing Currencies
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