Provides comprehensive syntheses of evidence along with point of care recommendations including current drug information, medical calculators, and patient education handouts.
This article database is a point-of-care information resource which contains over 10,000 clinical topics representing 25 specialties. In addition to searching the entire resource or viewing Topics by Specialty, there are options to view the newest updates (What's New), Practice Changing Updates, Drug Information, and Patient Education information. Specialties included are: Allergy and Immunology, Anesthesiology, Cardiovascular Medicine, Dermatology, Emergency Medicine (Adult and Pediatric), Endocrinology and Diabetes, Family Medicine and General Practice, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, General Surgery, Geriatrics, Hematology, Hospital Medicine, Infectious Diseases, Nephrology and Hypertension, Neurology, Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, Oncology, Palliative Care, Pediatrics, Primary Care (Adult), Primary Care Sports Medicine (Adolescents and Adults), Psychiatry, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Rheumatology, and Sleep Medicine.
Provides access to a wide range of full-text reference books and encyclopedias across various subjects, perfect for in-depth research and study.
This online library has hundreds of reference titles for multi-disciplinary research, including subject-specific biographical sources, directories, encyclopedias, and other reference sources related to American and world history, biography, health, arts, business, travel, religion, and multicultural studies.
Topics can be found in a variety of locations, from your textbook to the current news, like the feeds displayed below. When you've found a topic that catches your interest, look for the presence of medical terminology or keywords, then use the resources in the Background Knowledge section to deepen your understanding of them. News sources are a good place to start, but they should not fully inform your knowledge of a topic, as they are not scientific: they are written by journalists and not researchers. When you understand a little more about your topic, continue to Find Articles to move from broad understanding to specific research.