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Junior Doctor Medical Textbook
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Back in the 90s I knew a newly-qualified junior doctor who used to carry around this miniature textbook in her doctor's coat pocket. It had very thin paper and tiny print, was about A5 size and 300-400 pages thick.
Does anyone happen to know what that was called?
I once asked her which bits of it she needed to know off-by-heart.
"All of it" was her disconcerting reply which shone a glaring beacon on the grand canyon between her intellect and mine!
Does anyone happen to know what that was called?
I once asked her which bits of it she needed to know off-by-heart.
"All of it" was her disconcerting reply which shone a glaring beacon on the grand canyon between her intellect and mine!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks Sqad, but no, that Handbook looks much simpler. Hers had tiny text and no illustrations and it was more than just clinical procedures. It was a summary of the whole medical degree in a single compact book (this is what she told me). I think towards the back it had indexes of different drugs - both generic names and various proprietary names. It was terrifying just how much knowledge a doctor has to know. I didn't believe that she (or any human) could possibly remember so much so I asked her questions at random (mean, I know!) - not that I knew what most of the words I was reading actually meant! She did. She knew all of it! Respect!!
//////If the Doctors are expected to use the procedures, why aren't they taught at medical school?////
Good question Vulcan, I can only speak for my era, 1960 onwards but it appears nothing has changed.
If you have good and understanding doctors around you, they will instruct you, but I'm afraid the old medical axiom of " Watch one, do one, then teach one " still persists as a method of teaching.......unless I am well out of date.
Good question Vulcan, I can only speak for my era, 1960 onwards but it appears nothing has changed.
If you have good and understanding doctors around you, they will instruct you, but I'm afraid the old medical axiom of " Watch one, do one, then teach one " still persists as a method of teaching.......unless I am well out of date.
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