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Essentials of General Surgery |  | Creators: Richard M. Bell, Merril T. Dayton Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Category: Book
List Price: $56.95 Buy Used: $22.40 as of 9/9/2010 04:34 MDT details You Save: $34.55 (61%)
New (32) Used (52) from $22.40
Seller: Bookbyte123 Rating: 17 reviews Sales Rank: 8598
Media: Paperback Edition: Fourth Pages: 627 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8 Dimensions (in): 10.7 x 8.4 x 0.9
ISBN: 0781750032 Dewey Decimal Number: 617 EAN: 9780781750035 ASIN: 0781750032
Publication Date: July 12, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Essentials of General Surgery, Fourth Edition is extensively revised with an abundance of new tables and illustrations, to provide the most current and up-to-date information on general surgery. The book covers the most need-to-know information about specific diseases and areas of surgery and meets all the guidelines of the Association of Surgical Educators. Additional features include an atlas of images, multiple-choice questions, and case studies.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 17
Excellent for third year surgery clerkship March 4, 2004 Bergy 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
This book is just the right length for an aspiring surgeon to read during their surgery clerkship. If surgery isn't your bag then it's probably a bit much but is excellent as a reference for your patient's surgical issues. When compared against many of the larger texts such as Sabiston it doesn't seem to be missing much of the important information that I needed to write review papers or add to informal presentations. But it is much cheaper and less bulky, and thus ideal for medical students. I used this book along with the "Essentials of Surgical Specialties" volume.
Great book! May 29, 2010 A. Nash (Denver, CO) This book is very well written and easy to understand. It does not go in great depth like Sabiston, but it is very good for a third year rotation.
Perfect for the shelf January 28, 2004 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
A perfect concise text for medical students on their surgery rotation. This book helped me do better on my surgery shelf than I have on any other shelf exam. Read the whole thing and take notes as you do.
The Gross Clinic August 17, 2005 Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) 5 out of 21 found this review helpful
You don't have to be a doctor to get a kick out of this book. Peter Lawrence isn't a bad writer at all, and his colleagues who do different articles with him and help making up the questions and answers (many of them multiple choice, including some surprising zingers to see if you're awake) are also fairly competent at writing and know how to make a dry subject alive.
HRecently, when I was in the hospital and my doctors were trying to figure out what kind of procedure I should be having (to correct a leaky heart), a friend brought me this book to read while I tried to make the leaden hours go by quicker. Its attractive cover and easy-to-follow medical style convinced him that the more I knew about what might be happening to me, the better my mind would be able to cushion the shocks. You know what? My fingers quickly found themselves wrapped around the book's four corners and the hands of the clock fairly sped by as I acquainted myself with all sorts of interesting operations, from vacsular to gastric and even into plastic surgery, which by the way isn't as simple and brainless as you would think! I'm impressed by how difficult this vanity procedure is. However, surgery isn't child's play and the newbie to medical terms will probably get bogged down just trying to figure out what part of the body Dr. L is talking about from page to page. It will be a long time before I feel confident enough to pursue the next volume in this series, ESSENTIALS OF SURGICAL SPECIALTIES.
It all turned out well, and with this book on my shelf when visitors come by they sometimes ask if at one time when I was young I trained as a surgeon, only to wash out. The book's cover painting is of course by Thomas Eakins, it is his famous painting of THE GROSS CLINIC, painted at a time when surgery was undergoing rapid transformation, at a time right on the cusp of change. Of course you can see that none of the surgeons working on the poor patient are wearing scrubs nor any kind of hygienic clothes. They are all in street clothes and as you can tell, germs were still a vague concept to the Philadelphia surgeons of the day!
In your library, this volume should be an essential! Even if you have no interest in medicine, either personal or professional.
Lawrence-True Essentials of Surgery June 13, 2000 Drew Sutherland 23 out of 23 found this review helpful
I inititally bought this text in my second year of medical school. It was both an exceptionally detailed text and also a good reference on a wide variety of subjects. I have continued to use it into my surgical residency and expect to do so until I finish. My only detractions are that on occasion it is too densely packed with information, and that the section on peptic ulcer disease and the surgical treatment of the same is a little dated. Otherwise, any topic that a student needs to know about on a general surgical service is _well_ covered by this text.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 17
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