AusDI delivers rapid access to latest drug monographs, pharmaceutical company product information, consumer medicine information documents product summaries and drug product images.
Note: Before you can access AusDI off campus or on your mobile, you must register for an account using a desktop PC or your laptop while on campus.
Concise, up-to-date source of independent drug information to facilitate effective, rational, safe and economical prescribing and dispensing. recommendations.
BMJ Best Practice is a new easy-to-use decision-support tool that provides authoritative answers to clinical questions.
NOTE: Sign up for a free account with BMJ (while on campus), then download and sign in to the free app from the App Store for anywhere, anytime access.
Therapeutic Guidelines is an Australian evidence-based resource which recommends therapies for common disorders seen in clinical practice.
NOTE: You must register for a token annually while on campus to use this resource.
Denmark Technical University researchers have unveiled a free site called "FindZebra" that helps physicians and other professionals to generate diagnosis ideas for rare diseases.
Information on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme including details of the medicines subsidised by the Australian Government as well as information for consumers and health professionals.
UpToDate is an evidence-based clinical decision support tool, synthesizing the latest evidence to recommended best practices for thousands of conditions.
NOTE: This database is available to staff & students on campus and restricted to students only off campus.
Diagnosis and Treatment in Internal Medicine equips trainee doctors with the essential skills and core knowledge to establish a diagnosis reliably and quickly, before outlining the management of the clinical condition diagnosed.Organised into three sections, the first provides a vital overview, whilst the second focuses on common presentations and diagnoses. Uniquely, this new book shows readers how to turn symptoms into a list of diagnoses ordered by probability - a differential diagnosis. Experienced consultants whoteach trainees every day demonstrate how to derive an ordered differential diagnosis, how to narrow this down to a single diagnosis and if not, how to live with diagnostic uncertainty. The final section provides a comprehensive account of the management of system-based syndromes and diseases.Highly-structured chapters emphasize how common conditions present, how to approach a diagnosis, and how to estimate prognosis, treatment and its effectiveness. An onus is placed on the development of crucial diagnostic skills and the ability to devise evidence-based management plans quickly andaccurately, making this an ideal text for core medical trainees.
Now in its tenth edition, the Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine has been fully revised, with five new authors on the writing team bringing content fresh from the bedside. Space has been breathed into the design, with more core material at your fingertips in quick-reference lists and flow diagrams, and key references have been honed to the most up-to-date and relevant. Each page has been updated to reflect the latest changes inpractice and best management, and the chapters on gastroenterology, history and examination, infectious disease, neurology, and radiology have been extensively revised. Unique amongmedical texts, the Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine is a complete and concise guide to the core areas of medicine that also encourages thinking about the world from the patient's perspective, offering a holistic, patient-centred approach.
Practical General Practice by Lindsey M. Pope (Editor); Elaine Taylor (Editor); Lynsay Crawford (Editor); Rachael Imrie (Editor); Lynsey Yeoman (Editor); Adam Peter Staten (Editor); Paul Staten (Editor)