A word of caution if relying on electronic books rather than paper copies. 1. You will probably not have (easy) access after leaving university and working in hospital/GP posts. As an undergraduate you have passwords and free links to most textbooks. Not so when working in a DGH. 2. Do not fall into the trap of believing that, after your undergraduate degree, your need of your books is over. Studying for both general and specialist surgical exams relies on the need to go back to undergraduate texts, often viewed in a different light. Of course there will be basic science boks specific for medicine, surgery etc. but do not lose sight of the value of the books used during an undergraduate degree. Just a thought. Personally, I would buy some books and I agree, secondhand, is often just as good as new, but a whole deal cheaper. Vivien
Also you don’t necessarily need the latest edition during medical school. Often even just one edition earlier can be a fraction of the cost of the latest edition and basically just as good for the medical student’s purposes.
Initialy studying human anatomy seems to bo extremely complicated. It's true that it is complex and your studies wont change that. As for being overwhelming, this can be solved if you take your study one step at a time. I found an article on Sebs Study Crammer extremely helpful for this.
You all prolly dont give a shit but does anyone know of a trick to get back into an Instagram account?? I stupidly forgot the account password. I would love any help you can offer me.
@Zyaire Remington I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and Im trying it out now. Takes quite some time so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Do medic students flag their books? Accounting students here, and we flag every single section of our books otherwise we'd waste lots of time flipping through the books to find relevant sections.
Ollie...If you are there..I have been looking for answer of 1 query...Whoever I am asking in NHS, about reading a textbook...everyone's like...they dont read or never read any clinical med textbook. I really wonder, what do they read in Medical School than...If not any Kumar and Clarke//Oxford or Harrison book? I dont know, why...British students dont go through big textbooks like Kumar or Oxford. Please let me know. Thank You.
I suppose things have moved more online and people might be looking at other resources rather than the traditional textbooks. If we thought about American medical students who might be using Osmosis, Pathoma, UWorld etc etc -do they read the textbooks as much?
Thank you for replying! :) can you recommend books for microbiology pathology and pharmacology. And can you recommend any online recourses for understanding blood/chemistry values? Thank you so much. Really appreciate your content
@@missyn1234 I'd honestly stay clear of buying books if you can to be honest, I think there's more than enough stuff available online :) Particularly as you don't actually do much pathology/microbiology in med school - pharmacology wise Rang and Dale is my favourite
For your future videos, just go straight to the point and stop wasting time. Also, because of your glaring and egregious bias, your recommendations lose all credibility and objectivity. Thank you and best regards.
The video starts at 4:06
Thankuuu
Great video as always. I wasn't expecting to be overwhelmed with nostalgia, but the Spyro soundtrack really brought it out! 10/10
Very well spotted!
A word of caution if relying on electronic books rather than paper copies. 1. You will probably not have (easy) access after leaving university and working in hospital/GP posts. As an undergraduate you have passwords and free links to most textbooks. Not so when working in a DGH. 2. Do not fall into the trap of believing that, after your undergraduate degree, your need of your books is over. Studying for both general and specialist surgical exams relies on the need to go back to undergraduate texts, often viewed in a different light. Of course there will be basic science boks specific for medicine, surgery etc. but do not lose sight of the value of the books used during an undergraduate degree. Just a thought. Personally, I would buy some books and I agree, secondhand, is often just as good as new, but a whole deal cheaper. Vivien
Also you don’t necessarily need the latest edition during medical school. Often even just one edition earlier can be a fraction of the cost of the latest edition and basically just as good for the medical student’s purposes.
Initialy studying human anatomy seems to bo extremely complicated. It's true that it is complex and your studies wont change that. As for being overwhelming, this can be solved if you take your study one step at a time. I found an article on Sebs Study Crammer extremely helpful for this.
You all prolly dont give a shit but does anyone know of a trick to get back into an Instagram account??
I stupidly forgot the account password. I would love any help you can offer me.
@Corey Christopher instablaster ;)
@Zyaire Remington I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and Im trying it out now.
Takes quite some time so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Zyaire Remington it did the trick and I now got access to my account again. I'm so happy:D
Thank you so much you saved my ass :D
all these books are available in internet. U said it very meticulously on everything needed.
Goldmine! Thank you for making the video. However, I got half way through before I realized these books aren't for USA students. LOL.
I love you, man, thank you!
Great video-
A levels starting tommorow and chemistry is driving me crazy :-(
Just try and keep a level head, don't work yourself into the ground - best of luck!
@@OllieBurtonMed Thanks!
Do medic students flag their books? Accounting students here, and we flag every single section of our books otherwise we'd waste lots of time flipping through the books to find relevant sections.
Haven't even graduated highschool. I guess I got the bad habit of reading ahead from my mom coz I'm still in my third year of highschool💀
Thanks so much for this video! 🙏🏻
Great video. Gonna try finding out some
I wish you give recommendations on ENT and Opthalmology books
Good note
I sometimes get confused. Hoping the new editions will have *updated* infos, i try to buy latest edition. How do you see that
Just do snell for anatomy and you will thank me later!
Which the best textbook in histology,biochemistry
Stryer is very good for biochemistry
Thanks for this!
How about Frank Netter... Its a phenomenal Anatomy Reference.
It's very good I agree!
Ollie...If you are there..I have been looking for answer of 1 query...Whoever I am asking in NHS, about reading a textbook...everyone's like...they dont read or never read any clinical med textbook.
I really wonder, what do they read in Medical School than...If not any Kumar and Clarke//Oxford or Harrison book?
I dont know, why...British students dont go through big textbooks like Kumar or Oxford.
Please let me know.
Thank You.
I suppose things have moved more online and people might be looking at other resources rather than the traditional textbooks. If we thought about American medical students who might be using Osmosis, Pathoma, UWorld etc etc -do they read the textbooks as much?
@@OllieBurtonMed You are right boss...Thank you for your reply. I understood now.
How i can buy clinical medicine by Kumar plz tell me bro plz
Remember to Thumbs Up 👍
Which is the best book for neurosurgery
Tanks bro, means a lot
Hi
Without book how to learn clinical methods in detail...(like from Macleods textbook)
Thank you so much!
thanks for video , please l went question you about medical how learn English l don't will language English , please you can answer me
3:35
Thank you
Hi, you can help me. I don't know English well. I don't know how to learn medically if you help me. Thank you very much
Please for physiology
Thanks a lot...🙏
thanks 💙💙
Hi Ollie what Biochemistry books do you use?
Hi Nirali, there wasn't much of it in my course but I quite like Molecular Biology of the Cell!
Thank you for replying! :) can you recommend books for microbiology pathology and pharmacology. And can you recommend any online recourses for understanding blood/chemistry values? Thank you so much. Really appreciate your content
@@missyn1234 I'd honestly stay clear of buying books if you can to be honest, I think there's more than enough stuff available online :) Particularly as you don't actually do much pathology/microbiology in med school - pharmacology wise Rang and Dale is my favourite
amzn.to/2StiLhK: lehlinger... must read
@@OllieBurtonMed please can you help with those books in soft copy...am a medical student in zambia...
my email: wisemanchirwa9@gmail.com
No physiology book? 😐😑
Buy book & this is an Investment of money for your life & career. 😇
Great video! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I like readind book :)
Which is the best histology book?
Klajdi Tarko Textbook of Histology
Textbook by Leslie P Gartner, PhD
Janquiera
Sick intro 👌🏼
thought it was about time!
Fantastic
Great 🙋
For your future videos, just go straight to the point and stop wasting time. Also, because of your glaring and egregious bias, your recommendations lose all credibility and objectivity.
Thank you and best regards.