Pocket Prescriber

Pocket Prescriber

by TimothyR.J.Nicholson (Author)

Synopsis

The 'Pocket Prescriber' fills the as-yet vacant niche for a true pocketbook providing essential clinical pharmacology information with heavy emphasis on what junior doctors most need in practice on the wards. This information includes reference details of drugs such as doses, when a drug is indicated and when not, with special attention to contraindications/ dangers and common side effects to look out for, and warn the patient of, before starting the drug. A significant section of the book is given over to dealing with common problems that arise with prescribing, for example drugs that are complicated to prescribe (e.g. insulin, anticoagulants, inotropes, controlled drugs) or where choice is difficult (e.g. antihypertensives, antibiotics). Targeted primarily at junior doctors, it will also provide basic pharmacology information and facts about each drug in order to ensure it remains accessible and a useful learning tool for students.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 222
Publisher: Hodder Arnold
Published: 28 May 2004

ISBN 10: 034081151X
ISBN 13: 9780340811511

Media Reviews
A pocket book that is truly pocketable, every medical student and junior doctor should carry this book. Pocket Prescriber takes everything you would need from the BNF and puts it into an easy-to-read and usable format. I really cannot recommend Pocket Prescriber highly enough.
Oxford Medical School Gazette

This pocket reference is concise, easy to read and contains much of the information routinely used by house officers, medical students and other practitioners in the impatient setting.
Doody's Review Service
Author Bio
Timothy R.J. Nicholson MBBS (London), BSc (London), MSc (Oxon), MRCP Psychiatry SHO, South London & Maudsley Hospital Training Rotation, London, UK The author has a background as an SHO in General Medicine (St George's hospital), Endocrinology and Cardiology (Hammersmith Hospital training scheme) & Neurology (National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen sq). He is currently a psychiatry SHO at the Maudsley Hospital, King's College where he aims to combine psychiatry with neurology in an academic and clinical career. Editorial Advisor: Donald RJ Singer BMedBiol, MD, FRCP Professor of Clinical Pharmacology, Clinical Pharmacology Department, Leicester-Warwick Medical Schools, University of Warwick, Coventry