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The United States Congress has designated the 1990s as the "Decade
of the Brain" in recognition of the major importance of neurology
and the other neurosciences in the health and well-being of
Americans. It has been suggested that as many as 20% of all
patients seeking medical treatment have neurologic problems, either
as the presenting complaint or as an associated condition
complicating the primary illness. Thus, it is fitting that
Springer-Verlag should acknowledge the prominence of this medical
specialty area by devoting an entire volume of the Oklahoma Notes
series to neurology and clinical neuroscience. Of course, this text
is an outline overview and does not attempt to provide ency
clopedic coverage of neurology (the student desiring a
comprehensive review of the field may wish to seek in the library
the 60 + volumes in the series Handbook of Clinical Neurology
edited by Pierre J. Vinken and George W. Bruyn). However, the
information selected for inclusion in this volume of the Oklahoma
Notes series remains true to the goal of the whole series-only
materials vital in both the general clinical practice of medicine
and to answer questions on the all-important United States Medical
Licensing Examination have been incorporated in the text. Roger A.
Brumback, M.D.
Updated, revised and organized, the new Second Editions in the Clinical Sciences Series reflect the format of the USMLE Step 2. Each volume systematically presents the core information of a single segment of the medical curriculum, from Family Medicine to Psychiatry. You will also learn time-honored tricks of the trade,as well as the latest advances in clinical medicine: new diagnostic tools, new therapeutic interventions, and new pharmacologic options.
Dear Young Doctor, You are nearing the end of your formalized
test-taking after so many years of education. We want to help you
pass your boards and these books were written for that end. This
review of internal medicine is not an exhaustive treatise, but
serves as an example of learning points considered important
throughout the years. You will run into the same patients on this
examination, the internal medi cine specialty boards, and the
medicine sub-specialty boards should you choose to take them. Our
US healthcare delivery system is undergoing major transformation,
which has become frenetic since the first edition of this series
was published three years ago. This creates anxiety in physicians
and physicians-to-be, as we are unsure of the very foundations
which have supported medicine as we knew it. The chal lenge is to
carryon the duties of our noble profession while adapting to and
helping to shape the marketplace. Medical information is too
expansive to be mastered by the individual alone, and we must learn
to rely on automated inform atics systems to access current data.
Yet with all the changes, traditions of medical education are
remembered, honored, and still practiced. You will see evidence of
this history contained herein."
Each Oklahoma Notes book presents the core information of one
segment of the medical school curriculum. Written by some of the
most effective medical educators in the U.S., and now thoroughly
updated and revised, the Oklahoma Notes feature: Concise text
presented in outline format for rapid review; contents oriented to
promote success; self-assessment questions; and more tables and
figures designed to facilitate self-assessment and review.
One learns medicine, including pediatrics, by first learning a set
of rules and then spending the rest of his/her productive career
discovering exceptions to those rules. This book is intended to
serve as a study guide for organizing the acquisition of an initial
foundation of information about pediatric topics. Without an
initial set of rules all new information is simply another new
rule, and not an interpretive frame of reference for the deeper
level of understanding that occurs with the recognition that one is
dealing with a change in his previously held belief. As such, we
have attempted to include what we think most would agree are com
monly held operational "facts" of pediatrics, and have not tried to
justify or sub stantiate the facts with references or lengthy
background information as to why these facts are currently thought
to be true. Our primary intent in writing this book is to provide
an adequate core of pediatric information to enable one to pass the
pediatric portion of the national boards. We hope it will also
provide a foundation for those who wish to spend more time
discovering why children are different. If this study guide
fulfills whichever of these needs is yours, it will have been
successful. Jane E. PuIs, M. D. A. Eugene Osburn, D. O. vii
Acknowledgments No effort of this magnitude can be accomplished
without a good deal of support."
We have arranged this review text in an order that makes clinical
sense. We have assumed that the student has had considerable
experience with the field of psychiatry via didactic courses,
clinical rotations or both. The first chapter is an introduction to
psychiatry, noting significant persons and events in the growth of
the field. Chapter two focuses on general diagnostic categories and
the major intervention strategies that are used in the field.
Chapter three presents patient management in detail so that in the
later chapters, as disorders are being pre sented, the student can
have the management strategies clearly in mind. Chapters four
through twelve review each of the major psychiatric disorders in
detail and provide suggestions regarding the etiology and
appropriate treatment of the disorder. Chapter thirteen focuses on
the special problems of children. That is, while children can have
most of the same disorders as adults, there are disor ders that are
diagnosed in childhood that are different from those of adults.
Chapter fourteen focuses on special issues in the practice of
psychiatry such as sleep issues, forensic psychiatry, AIDS, etc.
Chapter fifteen is devoted to psychiat ric emergencies in both
adults and children. This is a review text and should not be
substituted for more complete texts. The authors do not recommend
that this book be used as a course text except in those academic
offerings that are specifically directed to an overview of
psychiatry."
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