Summary: The first 72 hours following assessment and admission to the emergency department are crucial to a patient’s care. As the medical practitioner on duty, you need good diagnostic skills and the ability to formulate a quick, safe and appropriate management plan. Making Sense of Acute Medicine is here to help.
This book is the perfect introduction to accurate diagnosis for medical students, newly qualified doctors and anyone intimately involved with the delivery of acute medical care. By focusing on the decision-making process in relation to common clinical presentations, Making Sense of Acute Medicine will assist you to: * take an accurate history and examine the patient with a focused approach *make appropriate investigations requests *formulate suitable management plans.
* Easy to navigate for quick reference with features such as ‘hazard’, ‘think’, and ‘question’ boxes * Helps the reader make decisions about which tests to request and differential diagnosis * Pocket-sized for use on the go * Written in a jargon-free style by two experts in the field * Illustrated throughout * Part of the successful Making Sense series
Table of Contents: 1 The shocked patient 2 The comatose patient 3 Chest pain 4 Breathlessness 5 Palpitation 6 Syncope 7 Seizures 8 Dizziness 9 Acute confusion 10 Acute headache 11 Weakness 12 Abdominal pain 13 Haematemesis and melaena 14 Diarrhoea and vomiting 15 Jaundice 16 The patient with a fever 17 Joint problems 18 Skin rashes 19 Back pain 20 Leg swelling Index
About the Author(s): Paul Jenkins, Professor of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Western Australia Paula Johnson, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Western Australia
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