The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Neurology for PDA
The Massachusetts General Sickbay Handbook of Neurology for PDA Books
Product Description
Neurology, neurosurgery, and internal medicine residents and practitioners will find this PDA an essential reference for their day-to-day do. Blending neurology and general medicine, this PDA-based product includes protocols, step-by-step tests and procedures, and choice-making algorithms. It covers all correlated topics such as neuroanatomy, neurosurgery, and radiology and highlights topics on the neurology board exam. Platform: Palm OS, Windows CE, and Pocket PC handheld devices
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No mention of ME (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis aka CFS/CFIDS). ME is a common (1M+ in US) and extremely debilitating NeuroEndocrine Immune Disease.
Rating: 1 / 5
I just finished my neurology clerkship and I carried this every day and never used it. It’s just not something you really need as an ms3. Maybe it would be excellent for a resident or intern but idk. The only thing I plotting was excellent about it is that my attending seemed impressed that i had it so I guess it was excellent in that regard. It seemed like it would have been excellent if I was really trying to make treatment decisions but I wasn’t so I didn’t use it.
Rating: 3 / 5
I got this book hoping for the same quality as the Mass General Medicine Handbook (the red one, Sabatine) but have been very disappointed. The Neuro handbook is not near as helpful as the Medicine handbook. It is confused, so it is very trying to find the in rank you are looking for. It is incomplete; entire classes of disease are gone and even in the ones that are included there is often vital in rank gone. Ordinarily the in rank that is in the book is not the type of in rank that you would need to reference in the middle of the night as a house officer on call. Unlike the Medicine handbook which is painstakingly referenced with landmark studies, this handbook has very few if any helpful references. It’s still in my coat pocket, but I have more or less given up trying to get any help out of it because it seldom has what I need. In summary, I haven’t found anything better yet, but I guess I’ll keep looking.
Rating: 2 / 5
Not very well presented. Not simple to read and find what you want…
Just disappointing…
Rating: 2 / 5
If you’re to own a pocket handbook, this one and the peripheral nerve book are the ones to have handy. It’s high yield in rank when you just need to look up a quick thing when you’re seeing a patient.
Rating: 5 / 5