Rubin’s Pathology: Clinicopathologic Foundations of Medicine 5th Edition
Rubin’s Pathology: Clinicopathologic Foundations of Medicine 5th Edition Books
Product Description
Rubin’s Pathology, Fifth Edition has won First Prize in Pathology in the British Medical Association Book Competition Awards, 2008. Widely acclaimed for its clinical approach to pathology and superb full-color illustrations, Rubin’s Pathology is now in its Fifth Edition–with a new editorial team, fully updated chapters, enhanced illustrations, and a complete new suite of online supplements for students and faculty. This edition includes over 200 new full-color schematic drawings, photographs, and micrographs, and timely coverage of bioterrorism, emerging diseases, and stem cell research. A new design feature visually highlights the pathogenesis in rank on pathologic conditions to help students quickly locate and focus on this crucial material. A brand-new companion Website on thePoint includes fully searchable text, interactive case studies, images, audio lectures, and teaching tools. “Doody’s Core Titles™ 2009.”
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I like this book. I used Robbins before but it seems like it highlights a lot of research info than right pathology. Rubin is very illustrative, simple to know, and honest forward. It’s all a matter of preferences. I’m very visual and a very graphic book is brilliant for me than a thousand words.
Rating: 5 / 5
The schedule date was march 16th, but until now. march 23th i haven’t received my buy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Rating: 1 / 5
I used Robbins in graduate school but also had bought a copy of Rubins for undergraduate courses. As other reviewer mentioned, Robbins wins hands down for explaining the detailed processes behind the selected pathological shape up. Rubin’s work fits in between Huge Robbins and Small Robbins. And for some students, its “just aptly”. I loved the graphics more in Rubins rather than Robbins, but will acknowledge its limitations with regard to content. I still tend to gravitate towards Rubin’s text before I pick up Robbins from the bookshelf. It might be the corporal exertion caught up to lift up the Robbins.
Rating: 4 / 5
As a Jefferson medical student who took classes with the very writers of this text and who also owned Robbins in addition to Rubin’s, I cannot urge anything but Robbins to anyone who wants to really know what they are learning because it is the gold standard of pathology, and there’s a reason for that.
Rubin’s book is solid and relatively well-written, but all the topics covered are very superficially discussed. For some people, that’s ok; for a med student who needs to know concepts rather than memorize facts, that’s not. I have worked with the residents in the pathology department here at Jefferson, and guess which book they use? Robbins. A lot of the time, it nearly seems like Rubin’s is paraphrasing Robbins in much looser terms – at times, it’s confusing. I will admit that one excellent thing about Rubin’s is that it mentions a few disease processes that may not be mentioned in Robbins, but it ends there – the diseases are simply mentioned. You may know that they exist but not have a clue what they are.
The particularly weak sections of Rubin’s are the clinically relevant ones and the illustrations. These pathologists are brilliant at what they do, but they are not clinicians; in describing clinical features of different diseases, they ordinarily just state the signs and symptoms experimental, but sometimes you may wonder why those things make sense and are left with no explanation.
The illustrations are hit or miss – some are fantastic and exhibit the top the author is trying to get across. Others look like they were taken with a greasy lens by a drunken photographer, which is problematic when looking at the histology. Also, there aren’t many side-by-side photo/photomicrograph comparisons of different processes involving the same tissue or organ; when there are, it seems coincidental that they have found two pictures of the same tissue and just throw them together.
I realize this isn’t a review for Robbins, but I urge you to look at that book before investing the same quantity of money in this one.
Why you might reckon Rubin’s is better than Robbins:
1) slightly smaller (6.2 pounds vs. 7.4 pounds, according to Amazon)
2) more “concise” writing
3) many photos and photomicrographs!
Why Robbins is really better than Rubin’s:
1 & 2) Smaller does not mean better! You are not going to read every word in either book, so it doesn’t matter that Robbins is a small wordier and longer. When you need to look at a textbook for reference, Robbins will make you know. Rubin’s will only give you a cursory look at what you want to know.
3) Robbins has many photos and photomicrographs, and every single one is crisp and in focus. That is ESSENTIAL for looking at histology! If you go to a bookstore and browse Rubin’s, you will see what I mean about the blurry pictures. A few examples in the 7th edition include figures 9-58, 18-9 B (not a single nucleus is in focus), 20-57 B & 20-62 (too dark and blurry), and many others that are out of focus, poorly lit, or both.
4) Overall, Robbins is a book very well place together that its authors made with the goal of teaching students. There are far fewer typographical and grammatical errors than in Rubin’s, which I reckon speaks to its meticulous editing. The pictures are well selected – perhaps even taken especially – for the text. Robbins clarifies pertinent normal anatomy and physiology pretty in depth in the beginning of each chapter before presenting the abnormal, even as Rubin’s assumes you know most of it and gives extremely brief background.
(NOTE: If you are a Jefferson student looking to buy Rubin’s, again, please save yourself the time/anguish. Yes, every picture on your exams will come from this textbook, but you will have access to those pictures on a review presentation every single time.)
In the pathology world, you will never hear anyone call Rubin’s the “bible” of pathology. Please do yourself a act of kindness and buy the groundbreaking new, updated version of Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease: With STUDENT CONSULT Online Access (Pathologic Basis of Disease (Robbins/Cotran))
Rating: 2 / 5
Simply place, this is the end-all be-all when it comes to pathologic analysis of disease states. Typically this is for 2nd year Medical School Students and/or Pathology trainees. Unless you are going into pathology as a sub-discipline, you may be overloaded with this in rank. If you want a concise primer on all things pathology, look into “Essential Pathology” by Rubin, which is proposed as a summary of the 4th edition seen here. Of note is that the Essential Pathology does not include the CD-Rom that comes with this book, which is the best pictorial-based review I’ve ever seen — worth the cost of the book lonely!
To expand, IF PRESSED ON TIME, DON’T GET THIS ONE! If you are willing to spend the time and effort required for a HUGE book like this (over several semesters), your money will be well spent. As a book itself, this one has 5 stars easily; as a text for a course, I’d give 4 1/2, only for the overabundance of in rank for a small period of time.
I have had Dr. Rubin in classes (and some courses using the same text but with other Thomas Jefferson University professors), and the man is a genius in the field. This is just one student’s attitude, so take it with a grain of salt, but I mention this only to describe the wealth, if not overabundance, of in rank contained within this book.
Rating: 5 / 5