Customer Reviews
Oxford Handbook of Clinical Specialties - By: Renal, 06 Nov 2008 
An absolutely vital handbook that helped me significantly through medical school. Although it's nowhere near as comprehensive as separate textbooks are, it's an invaluable aide memoir that does go into significant detail.
An essential buy, but its not quite OHCM... - By: adopted scouser, 24 Mar 2008 
'Salt & Vinegar', as this book has affectionately come to be know, has become something of a bible to a 3rd year med student. It has most of the information you'd need for the specialty rotations.
When compared to the OHCM, however, improvements to the layout of some of the text needs improving.
Also, the 'insights' givenin this book- quotes from books, ethical tangents, are all too often not insightful at all. They're long & not always optional reading, as they're woven into the essential reading.
completely indispensible - By: , 30 Jan 2005 
My copy of this book is breaking apart at the spine & has a few missing pages: this is a testment only to the fact that I've used it so much. I'm an SHOin Paediatrics now, and, since I bought this bookin third year I have used it countless times as both as a quick reference guide, & during revision for numerous exams. I quickly came to rely on this book & it's yellow-skinned cousin (OHCM) for brief & memorable introductions to ailments I encountered on the wards & during my revision. This edition is divided into several chapters including Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Paediatrics, Ophthalmology, ENT, Dermatology, A£E, Orthopaedics, General Practice, & Psychiatry (amongst others).
While some might feel the poetic subtext on many of the pages is somewhat annoying & pretentious (read the page entitled 'a journey on foot'in the orthopaedic section), I have always found it a welcome augmentation to the raw medical dimension contained within the books pages.
No junior doctorin the UK should be without these books, of that I am certain.
A must for any med. student for quick reference on the wards - By: , 20 Jan 2001 
This book together with the Handbook for Clinical Medicine is absolutely essential for survival on the wards. If you havn't got a clue what's wrong with the patient, what the consultant is talking about or what you are meant to do next- these books help you out. They are compact enough to stickin your pocket, but have enough information crammedin to tell you everything that you could be expected to know about any condition. As I said this is a must for any med. student or junior doc. The proof really is that these aren't some new fancy books that have to be put to the test now, everyone I've spoken to seems to have been using them for years- Good Luck!