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G**N
invaluable
This purchase can best be described as 'great', as a clinical resource it has everything I need, a great purchase. I highly recommend it to anyone in psychiatry.
A**E
Five Stars
Excelent book!
B**N
Review Shorter Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry
Not informative as I expected.But would be useful for post graduate trainees in there first two to three years.Too expensive for the amount of knowledge it contains. especially for a kindle edition.
J**N
Gregg L. Friedman MD, Psychiatrist, Hallandale Beach, FL
Shorter Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry is a wonderful psychiatric textbook. It is well organized and covers everything from Autism to Tourette's Disorder in great detail. It covers the new atypical antipsychotic medications. I give it 5 stars. By Gregg L. Friedman MD, Psychiatrist, Hallandale Beach, FL
G**M
More like a medieval British novel
This book is hands down the worst "textbook" I have ever read since I gained any sort of cognitive ability in reading. After reading a few chapters I'm not quite sure if I'm reading a textbook or just a book with text. Written in language that is as pretentious as its title, the "Shorter" Oxfuurd Textbook of Psychiatry probably caters better to 1) certain Northeastern Atlantic Islanders who are more used to reading Charles Dickens than a proper medical textbook, or 2) certain professionals whose job schedules can afford them the luxury of time to read such a text with tea and scones. Sentences are long-winded, and littered by frequent and simply annoying citations of studies(Shakespeare, 1601) that are often done (Dickens, 1861) some 30 years ago (Some Medical Student, 2013). You can almost feel the authors were making desperate attempts to stylize every paragraphs in such a way that concepts are rarely delivered to readers in active sentences. This style of writing is extremely pompous and user-unfriendly for someone who actually tries to LEARN rather than to DECIPHER. Macroscopically, the organization of content within chapters is equally egregious. For example in the chapter of alcohol abuse, it begins with the DSM/ICD classification of substance abuse disorder (alright, nothing to complain here), then move on to a tedious discussion of the political correctness of using the term "alcoholism" (err..ok), then onto moral and ethical models (what!?), then some random epidemiological data, history of alcohol abuse studies.......After 3 or 4 pages the authors finally remember to discuss alcohol disorder itself, as if they just suffered from some sort of folie a deux from seeing too many patients with circumstantial thinking. But even then the authors are merely quoting a bunch of figures from selected studies, with the usual abundance of MLA style citations along the way. It's like reading an anthology of abstracts from pubmed, rather than a textbook with a general discussion of psychiatric disorders. For someone who is just starting out on psychiatry, either as a student or as a junior resident, this book is definitely NOT the book you would go to. It simply does not have any concrete discussion/description of psychiatric disorders as you would expect from a traditional textbook. Rather, you will be reading a regurgitation of data from various studies, peppered with some irrelevant discussion on history, ethics, and whatever medical services are available in the UK (...fine if you're from the UK ). I would give this book negative 5 stars if I can, but I'll give it one for the tables that compare DSM vs ICD...and for being an expensive doorstop.
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