American College of Clinical Pharmacy
      Search      Cart
         

Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment Flash Cards, Second Edition

Member -
Nonmember -

CURRENT Medical Diagnosis and Treatment Flashcards contains 250 flashcards drawn from the pages of the core CMDT text that facilitate your analysis of test cases and enhances your recall of internal medicine topics. Included in this handy, quick-reference sourcebook are all topics within the Internal Medicine Clerkship Curriculum, as well as additional material pertaining to CMDT coverage. Organized according the Core Curriculum of the Clerkship Directors in Internal Medicine, the flashcards cover over 30 core topics that encompass fundamental concepts, common conditions, presentations, treatment approaches, and diseases seen by general practitioners in the inpatient and outpatient settings. The flashcards utilize content from CMDT, Quick Answers, and Lange Pathophysiology to provide a case-based application that tests key concepts in clinical reasoning, clinical problem-solving, and recognition of essential clinical facts. The second edition of CURRENT Medical Diagnosis and Treatment Flashcards features updated, refreshed content throughout, making it the most indispensable--and current--clerkship prep tool available. Now more than ever, it's required reading for every medical and nursing student, physician assistant, nurse practitioner, house officer, and practicing physician.

•Extensive content updating to the flashcards

•Cross-referenced to the CMDT book in the flashcard references to point you to relevant content in the most recent edition of the book

•Questions cover salient features; how to think through the problem; essentials of diagnosis; symptoms and signs; differential diagnosis; laboratory, imaging, and procedural findings; treatment modalities; and more.

Author(s): Gene R. Quinn, M.D.; Nathaniel W. Gleason, M.D.; Maxine A. Papadakis, M.D.; Stephen J. McPhee, M.D.
ISBN: 978-0-07-184802-2
Publication Year: 2016
Format: Flash Cards
250 pages