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Book Description:From the basic science underpinnings to the most recent developments in medical and surgical care, Campbell-Walsh-Wein Urology offers a depth and breadth of coverage you won’t find in any other urology reference. Now in three manageable volumes, the revised 12th Edition is a must-have text for students, residents, and seasoned practitioners, with authoritative, up-to-date content in an intuitively organized, easy-to-read format featuring key points, quick-reference tables, and handy algorithms throughout. About the Authors/Authors Notes:Alan PartinAlan W. Partin, MD, PhDDavid Hall McConnell Professor and ChairAffiliations and ExpertiseProfessor and Director of Urology; Department of Urology; The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine; Baltimore, MD, USACraig PetersCraig A. Peters, MDChief, Division of Surgical Innovation, Technology and TranslationAffiliations and ExpertiseProfessor of Urology; University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; Chief, Section of Pediatric Urology; Children’s Health System; Dallas, TX, USALouis KavoussiLouis R. Kavoussi, MDProfessor and Chair, Department of UrologyAffiliations and ExpertiseWaldbaum-Gardner Professor and Chairman of Urology, The Arthur Smith Institute for Urology, Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine, Hempstead, NYRoger DmochowskiAffiliations and ExpertiseProfessor of Urologic Surgery, Vice Chair, Section of Surgical Sciences, Associate Surgeon in Chief, Associate, Chief of Staff, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TennesseeAlan WeinAlan J.
Wein, MDProfessor and Chair, Division of UrologyAffiliations and ExpertiseFounders Professor and Emeritus Chief of Urology Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Philadelphia, PA.
You’re a doctor 11 hours into your shift, and you’ve just walked into a waiting area packed with patients. There’s an elderly man complaining of mild chest pain, a teenage girl whose arms are swollen with bee stings, and an ambulance that is bringing in two unresponsive kids from a car crash.
What do you do next?Welcome to a typical day on the job for doctors in emergency departments: the most intense department in any hospital, and home to the kind of split-second decision making, high-stress troubleshooting, and rapid medical detective work that can make the difference between a patient’s life and death.Unlike scheduled doctor appointments, no one actually plans to end up in an emergency room. There’s an art and science behind how doctors diagnose and treat medical patients. Where do doctors get these skills? The Grand Rounds experience, where they practice how to make accurate diagnoses by examining real patients. When you’re sick, you go to a doctor to figure out what’s wrong. But how doctors work isn’t some impenetrable mystery. Rather, there’s an art and science that goes into how they diagnose and treat patients.Where do doctors gain these skills?
The answer: the Grand Rounds experience, an essential part of medical students’ education and the ongoing process whereby doctors practice how to make diagnoses by examining real patients. Watching doctors solve medical problems like detectives is a fascinating way to explore medicine. And by understanding how doctors help patients, you’llmake better sense of future visits to your doctor;improve the way you communicate with your doctor;get a rewarding introduction to how doctors think and work; andwitness critical thinking skills at work in the medical world.With The Great Courses, you don’t have to soldier through medical school to learn how doctors diagnose and treat patients.
All you need is Medical School for Everyone: Grand Rounds Cases, in which Dr. Roy Benaroch, a practicing physician and an adjunct assistant professor of pediatrics at the Emory University School of Medicine, guides you through 24 unique Grand Rounds that reveal insights into how doctors do what they do. The Doctors In Training Solid Internal Medicine video series offers you an opportunity to learn the high-yield information that you need to perform well on your rotations, prepare for shelf exams or review an area in which you need to strengthen your foundation. Solid Internal Medicine will also help you prepare for your USMLE Step 3 exam.Duration: 12 hours ( 5.62 GB)Every educator is a physician with clinical experienceEach video comes with a PDF study guide accessible through your personalized dashboardGET IT FREE HERE. The Doctors In Training Solid OB/GYN video series offers you an opportunity to learn the high-yield information that you need to perform well on your rotations, prepare for shelf exams or review an area in which you need to strengthen your foundation. Taught by practicing OB/GYNs and DIT Chief Educator Chris Lewis, MD, the Solid OB/GYN video series is also useful to help prepare for your USMLE Step 3 exam.Duration: 18 hours ( 9.68 GB)Each video includes a Quick Review and End-of-Session Quiz to emphasize key pointsEach video comes with a PDF study guide accessible through your personalized dashboardAll videos are taught by physicians with relevant clinical experienceGET IT FREE HERE. The physician educators at Doctors In Training have taken a—let’s face it—really dry topic taught differently at every school and brought out what you need to know.
Campbell-Walsh Urology Tenth Edition. Join for free. Content may be subject to copyright. Download full-text PDF. A preview of the PDF is not available. This Website Is Intended To Provide Medical Ebooks For Free Download By Doctors & Medical Students. CLICK HERE FOR MEDICAL BOOKS FREE DOWNLOAD FOR THOSE MEMBERS WITH BLOCKED DOWNLOAD LINKS. Medical Videos, Urology Comments Off on Campbell-Walsh Urology 11th Edition.
Whether you missed a day of class, you’re about to go on rotations, or you just need a stronger foundation, this is the video series for you.Duration: 52 hours (17.9 GB)Clinically relevantComprehensive with focus on high-yield topicsActive learning techniques keep you engagedEach video comes with a PDF study guide accessible through your personalized dashboardEvery educator is a physician with clinical experienceGET IT FREE HERE. Categories. (557). (356). (173). (88).
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