Pharmacology for busy people.
With triplet eight-year-old daughters, I don’t get four-hour study blocks in a quiet corner of the library. I get an hour here or 15 minutes there. This book is for those commuters, busy parents, and working students who need a “fit it in” approach to studying pharmacology. This book has multiple rapid-fire questions, answers, rationales, and mnemonics that you can do alone or with a partner to help you understand pharmacology better and remember the content longer. It includes:
Prefixes, suffixes, and infixes matching: These are the key to learning many hundreds of drug classifications.
Sorting series section: Here you make sense out of drug classes better picturing their relationships.
One-line cases: These cases come in pairs so you can work with a partner.
Short essay prompts: It’s nice to know how the professor might answer a question.
A special bonus chapter preview from the book Memorizing Pharmacology Mnemonics.
But let’s talk about the most pressing issue that keeps you from succeeding: energy.
(Tags : Memorizing Pharmacology Questions, Answers, and Rationales Book 1: Gastrointestinal Pharmacology Review with Visual Memory Aids and Mnemonics (Unabridged) Tony Guerra Audiobook, Tony Guerra Audio CD )