The manual is authored by a team of clinical pharmacologists from St George’s Hospital, London, including Andrew Hitchings, Dagan Lonsdale, Daniel Burrage, and Emma Baker.
The book centers on a "starter formulary" of the 100 most frequently prescribed and clinically important drugs. Each drug or drug class is presented in a consistent, easy-to-read double-page spread. The Top 100 Drugs: Clinical Pharmacology and Pr...
Drugs can be looked up alphabetically, by organ system, or by clinical indication. Key Details & Availability The manual is authored by a team of
Covers common indications, mechanism of action, adverse effects, warnings, and important drug interactions. Drugs can be looked up alphabetically, by organ
is a highly regarded medical manual and textbook designed to bridge the gap between pharmacological science and real-world prescribing for students and junior doctors.
Includes "clinical tips" for every drug and self-assessment questions (increased from 50 to 100 in recent editions) to test knowledge integration.
Originally developed in response to student requests for a concise guide to the most important drugs used in the National Health Service (NHS), the book was first published in 2014 and is now in its . Core Content and Structure
The manual is authored by a team of clinical pharmacologists from St George’s Hospital, London, including Andrew Hitchings, Dagan Lonsdale, Daniel Burrage, and Emma Baker.
The book centers on a "starter formulary" of the 100 most frequently prescribed and clinically important drugs. Each drug or drug class is presented in a consistent, easy-to-read double-page spread.
Drugs can be looked up alphabetically, by organ system, or by clinical indication. Key Details & Availability
Covers common indications, mechanism of action, adverse effects, warnings, and important drug interactions.
is a highly regarded medical manual and textbook designed to bridge the gap between pharmacological science and real-world prescribing for students and junior doctors.
Includes "clinical tips" for every drug and self-assessment questions (increased from 50 to 100 in recent editions) to test knowledge integration.
Originally developed in response to student requests for a concise guide to the most important drugs used in the National Health Service (NHS), the book was first published in 2014 and is now in its . Core Content and Structure