Critical and Intensive Care Medicine - Medical School Crash Course

Critical and Intensive Care Medicine - Medical School Crash Course
Author: Audiolearn Medical Content Team
Publisher:
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2020-03-15
Genre:
ISBN:

AudioLearn's Medical School Crash Courses presents Critical and Intensive Care Medicine. Written by experienced professors and professionally narrated by a medical doctor for accuracy, this crash course is a valuable tool both during school and when preparing for the USMLE, or if you're simply interested in the subject of critical and intensive care medicine. The audio is focused and high-yield, covering the most important topics you might expect to learn in a typical medical school critical and intensive care medicine course. Included are both capsule and detailed explanations of critical issues and topics you must know to master critical and intensive care medicine. The material is accurate, up-to-date, and broken down into bite-sized sections. There is a "Q&A" and a "key takeaways" section following each chapter to review questions commonly tested and drive home key points. In this course, we'll cover the following topics: Introduction to critical care Acid-base disorders Pulmonary Cardiovascular disorders Nephrology and electrolyte disorders Gastrointestinal diseases Neurology Endocrine Infectious diseases Toxicology Trauma Nutrition Special topics Also included is a comprehensive test containing the top 100 most commonly tested questions in critical and intensive care medicine with the correct answers. AudioLearn's Medical School Crash Courses support your studies, help with USMLE preparation, and provide a comprehensive audio review of the topic matter for anyone interested in what medical students are taught in a typical medical school critical and intensive care medicine course.

The Eighth Day

The Eighth Day
Author: Richard Newbold Adams
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 311
Release: 1988-03-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0292720610

Can human social evolution be described in terms common to other sciences, most specifically, as an energy process? The Eighth Day reflects a conviction that the human trajectory, for all its uniqueness and indeterminism, will never be satisfactorily understood until it is framed in dynamics that are common to all of nature. The problem in doing this, however, lies in ourselves. The major social theories have failed to treat human social evolution as a component of broader natural processes. The Eighth Day argues that the energy process provides a basis for explaining, comparing, and measuring complex social evolution. Using traditional ecological energy flow studies as background, society is conceived as a self-organization of energy. This perspective enables Adams to analyze society in term of the natural selection of self-organizing energy forms and the trigger processes basic to it. Domestication, civilization, socioeconomic development, and the regulation of contemporary industrial nation-states serve to illustrate the approach. A principal aim is to explore the limitation that energy process imposes on human social evolution as well as to clarify the alternatives that it allows. Richly informed by contemporary anthropological historicism, sociobiology, and Marxism, The Eighth Day avoids simple reductionism and denies facile ideological categorization. Adams builds on work in nonequilibrium thermodynamics and theoretical biology and brings three decades of his own work to an analysis of human society that demands an extreme materialism in which human thought and action find a central place.