Image | |
EAN-13 | 9780071766999 |
Product Name | Case Files Surgery, Fourth Edition (Lange Case Files) |
Category | Book / Magazine / Publication |
Short Description | Height:8.98 inches / Length:6.06 inches / Weight:1.38 pounds / Width:0.79 inches |
Amazon.com | Buy on Amazon ~ 0071766995 |
SKU | ACOUK_BOOK_USEDGOOD_0071766995 |
Price New | 29.99 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Price Used | 5.44 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Width | 0.8 inches (convert) |
Height | 9 inches (convert) |
Length | 6.1 inches (convert) |
Weight | 22.4 ounces (convert) |
Author | Eugene Toy, Terrence Liu, Andre Campbell |
Page Count | 544 |
Binding | Paperback |
Published | 07/10/2012 |
Long Description | REAL-LIFE CASES FOR THE SURGERY CLERKSHIP You need exposure to high-yield cases to excel in the surgery clerkship and on the shelf exam. Case Files: Surgery presents 56 real-life cases that illustrate essential concepts in surgery. Each case includes a complete discussion, clinical pearls, references, definitions of key terms, and USMLE-style review questions. With this system, you'll learn in the context of real patients, rather then merely memorize facts. 56 high-yield cases, each with USMLE-style questions, help you master core competencies to excel on the clerkship and ace the shelf exam , Clinical pearls highlight key concepts , Primer teaches you how to approach clinical problems , Proven learning system maximizes your shelf exam scores HERE'S WHAT STUDENTS HAVE TO SAY … " …an extremely useful resource. It is a quick read and it serves to cover all the important topics pertaining to surgery at a level appropriate for a third-year medical student or surgical intern. It serves as a good introduction to the basic surgical diseases and their management." -- Jeffrey Feiner, Medical Student, Buffalo Medical School (reviewing previous edition) |
Similar Items | 9780071768573: Case Files Critical Care (Lange Case Files) 9780071768542: Case Files Emergency Medicine, Third Edition (Lange Case Files) 9780071761727: Case Files Internal Medicine, Fourth Edition (Lange Case Files) 9780071761710: Case Files Obstetrics And Gynecology, Fourth Edition (Lange Case Files) 9780071606394: Case Files Anesthesiology (Lange Case Files) 9780071605434: Case Files High-Risk Obstetrics (Lange Case Files) 9780071598996: Case Files Emergency Medicine, Second Edition (Lange Case Files) 9780071475662: Lange Q&a Surgery, Fifth Edition 9780071448710: First Aid For The Surgery Clerkship (First Aid Series) 9780071448703: First Aid For The Surgery Clerkship (First Aid Series) View 22 more similar items |
Created | 12-30-2012 12:44:04am |
Modified | 04-30-2020 3:24:16pm |
MD5 | c3fa20ba3301aed3d5c62f61a36c23e2 |
SHA256 | 4c17885eb4eb089fee3aae5fdac6e307e02d03c28a20cace817214ef674d0ddc |
Search Google | by EAN or by Title |
Query Time | 0.0268779 |
An article of interest
The Main EANData blog
Code 128 Barcodes
Code 128 is a high-density 1D barcode symbology. This barcode set makes use of the entire 128 ASCII characters which include letter, number and symbols.
As with all barcodes, there are indicators to identify where the barcode starts and stops. These are marked in yellow below. Code 128 also has a check character which has been marked in green. The remainder of the barcode is the data being encoded. The text below the barcode is optional and is for human consumption in the event the barcode can't be scanned or if people also need to know what the code means.
Each character in the barcode symbol is composed of three bars and three spaces. Each bar or space must range from 1-4 units and the sum of all the width of all bars must work out to an even number. The stop marker is special because it adds an extra bar of 2 units at the very end (4 bars and 3 spaces). There are three different start markers to to identify which code set is being used. To represent all 128 characters, the code sets can be within a single barcode as needed by using control characters 98-101 (depending on the code set).
The check character is calculated by summing the value of each character and multiplying it by its position. The start character is also part of the sum but is added without weight (multiply by 1 just like the first encoded data character) then when you have the sum take the modulo 103 remainder. This gets a little more complex when mixing modes within a single barcode.