Makes me kinda sad to look back and realize I didn't get a chance to read a single book of my choosing. But I did manage to knock out the following (in chronological order):
The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of General Hospital Psychiatry by Theodore Stern
Handbook of Neurosurgery by Mark Greenberg
Fundamentals of Neurology: An Illustrated Guide by Marco Mumenthaler and Heinrich Mattle
The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Pain Management by Jane Ballantyne
The Requisites: Neuroradiology by David Yousem and Robert Zimmerman
Differential Diagnosis in Internal Medicine by Walter Siegenthaler
The Requisites: Cardiac Imaging by Miller (+ people I can't remember)
The Requisites: Thoracic Radiology by Theresa McLoud
Obstetrics and Gynecology: Essentials of Clinical Care by Reece and Barbieri
Handbook of Otolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery by Goldberg and Goldstein
Basic Otorhinolaryngology: A Step-by-Step Learning Guide by Rudolf Probst
Color Atlas of Ophthalmology By Amar Agarwal
I was quite impressed with the books, and would recommend them to anyone interested in introductory texts (med-student/intern level) in the above fields. Very helpful for wards and exams. The toughest one to get through is the Siegenthaler text, but only because it's so lengthy. Lots of great illustrations and tables. Just try to read a little bit every day after work and you'll get through it over 10-12 weeks.
The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of General Hospital Psychiatry by Theodore Stern
Handbook of Neurosurgery by Mark Greenberg
Fundamentals of Neurology: An Illustrated Guide by Marco Mumenthaler and Heinrich Mattle
The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Pain Management by Jane Ballantyne
The Requisites: Neuroradiology by David Yousem and Robert Zimmerman
Differential Diagnosis in Internal Medicine by Walter Siegenthaler
The Requisites: Cardiac Imaging by Miller (+ people I can't remember)
The Requisites: Thoracic Radiology by Theresa McLoud
Obstetrics and Gynecology: Essentials of Clinical Care by Reece and Barbieri
Handbook of Otolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery by Goldberg and Goldstein
Basic Otorhinolaryngology: A Step-by-Step Learning Guide by Rudolf Probst
Color Atlas of Ophthalmology By Amar Agarwal
I was quite impressed with the books, and would recommend them to anyone interested in introductory texts (med-student/intern level) in the above fields. Very helpful for wards and exams. The toughest one to get through is the Siegenthaler text, but only because it's so lengthy. Lots of great illustrations and tables. Just try to read a little bit every day after work and you'll get through it over 10-12 weeks.
This message last edited by Praziquantel on 22/12/2011 at 05:20:14 AM
As there are only two weeks left in 2011, how about you tell us your best reads for the year?
18/12/2011 11:21:19 AM
- 1142 Views
I would share details, but I always wait until the 31st to write a detailed blog post
18/12/2011 08:12:36 PM
- 792 Views
In Cold Blood was probably the best, Black Out/All Clear was pretty bad. *NM*
19/12/2011 10:57:23 AM
- 365 Views
Only read a couple of new releases this year.
20/12/2011 12:13:20 AM
- 786 Views
Re: As there are only two weeks left in 2011, how about you tell us your best reads for the year?
20/12/2011 10:04:19 PM
- 822 Views
Ah, what a year
22/12/2011 04:35:13 AM
- 831 Views
For some, you have to pick and choose your battles. EDIT: Supposed to be a reply to rebelaessedai
24/12/2011 02:27:01 AM
- 847 Views