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E-Textbooks For Isilo
(palm, PPC, smartphone & symbian support) |
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Harrison's Principles & Practice of Medicine - 15th
This is a memory monster, but if you have the room, I'd
recommend it. The folks at Johns Hopkins produce this
free antibiotic guide, which allows you to search by
drug, by bug, or by diagnosis. Each treatment protocol
gives pertinent references, and even an "expert opinion"
by a physician justifying the regimen. This is truly an
enormous amount of information at your disposal.
Further, the Hopkins Guide updates automatically when
you synchronize your device.
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Baily & Loves's Short Practice Of Surgery
format
isilo size : 2 mb |
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Derma-Meister (atlas of Skin Lesions)
ePocrates Rx is the free version of the very popular
ePocrates Rx Pro. ePocrates Rx lacks the alternative
medicines information and some of the functionality of
the Pro version, but the free version is still very
powerful in its own right. The list of drugs is huge,
all drugs can be cross-checked for interactions, and the
database updates itself every time you synchronize your
handheld. This program occupies an enormous chunk of
memory, but you'll use it more than all of your other
"third party" programs combined.
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Family Practice handbook
Eponyms is one of those rare applications that you'll
use just as much in the preclinical years as the
clinical ones. It does just what it's called: it puts
hundred's of eponyms at your finger (or stylus) t
http://eponyms.net/.
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Introduction To Clinical Radiology
Face it: staying current with the medical literature is
a battle you'll be fighting from now on. Don't you hate
when you're on rounds and the other student shows up
with ten copies of the most releross this article on paraneoplastic pemphigus...".
See it.
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Derma-Meister (atlas of Skin Lesions)
This program works miracles. Here's the concept: you
have a bunch of flashcards and five boxes. Put all the
cards in the first box. Each time you get an answer
right, the card goes into the next box-- if not, it
stays put. When all the cards are in the fifth box, you
know them cold. Learn?! is exactly what I just
described, for your Palm Powered handheld. Flashcard
databases are easy to make, and the program is fun to
use. I relied pretty heavily on this one during the
preclinical year. The developer is Sebastian Laiblin,
his page is
here.
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