SOAP for the rotations / Peter S. Uzelac ; special contributor, Daniel C. Maldonado.
By: Uzelac, Peter S [author.].
Contributor(s): Maldonado, Daniel C. (Physician) [contributor.].
Series: SOAP series: Publisher: Philadelphia : Wolters Kluwer, ©2020Description: xxx, 486 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781975107659.Subject(s): Clinical Medicine -- methodsGenre/Form: Handbook | Print books.Summary: "Rather than attempting to summarize the contents of a thousand-page textbook into a miniature form, the SOAP series focuses exclusively on guidance through patient encounters. In a typical use, "finding out where to start" or "refreshing your memory" with SOAP books should be possible in less than a minute. Subjects are always confined to two pages, and the most important points have been highlighted. Topics have been limited to those problems you will most commonly encounter repeatedly during your training, and contents are grouped according to the hospital or clinic setting. Facts and figures that are not particularly helpful to surviving life on the wards, such as demographics, pathophysiology, and busy tables and graphs have purposely been omitted (such details are much better studied in a quiet environment using large and comprehensive texts)"--Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
On Shelf | RC71 .U94 2020 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU00000000016006 |
Includes index.
"Rather than attempting to summarize the contents of a thousand-page textbook into a miniature form, the SOAP series focuses exclusively on guidance through patient encounters. In a typical use, "finding out where to start" or "refreshing your memory" with SOAP books should be possible in less than a minute. Subjects are always confined to two pages, and the most important points have been highlighted. Topics have been limited to those problems you will most commonly encounter repeatedly during your training, and contents are grouped according to the hospital or clinic setting. Facts and figures that are not particularly helpful to surviving life on the wards, such as demographics, pathophysiology, and busy tables and graphs have purposely been omitted (such details are much better studied in a quiet environment using large and comprehensive texts)"--