Dr Najeeb Lectures Cardiology

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Mauricette Atencio

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Jul 25, 2024, 10:30:04 PM7/25/24
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Osmosis is a top-tier YouTube channel that every medical student should follow. Their videos explain complex medical concepts in a simple, easy-to-understand manner. With over 1.5 million subscribers, they have a vast library of content covering various medical topics, including anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, and clinical skills.

Osmosis uses high-quality animations and graphics to help illustrate complex ideas, making it easier for students to grasp and retain the information. They also offer mnemonic devices and memory aids, which can be extremely helpful when it comes to memorizing vast amounts of medical information.

MedCram is another excellent YouTube channel for medical students. Their videos focus on providing clear, concise, and comprehensive medical lectures. With over 1 million subscribers, MedCram covers a wide range of topics, including pulmonology, cardiology, infectious diseases, and more.

The channel's creator, Dr. Roger Seheult, is a practicing physician and a medical educator with years of experience. His teaching style is easy to follow and engages students by breaking down complicated topics into manageable pieces.

Dr. Najeeb's YouTube channel has earned its reputation as one of the best resources for medical students worldwide. With over 2 million subscribers, Dr. Najeeb Lectures covers a vast array of medical subjects, including biochemistry, physiology, pathology, and more.

Dr. Najeeb's teaching style is unique, as he uses a blend of hand-drawn illustrations, humor, and storytelling to make even the most complex topics engaging and easy to understand. His videos are not only educational but also entertaining, ensuring that students remain engaged throughout the learning process.

For medical students looking to master human anatomy, Kenhub is the perfect YouTube channel. With over 500,000 subscribers, Kenhub offers comprehensive video tutorials on human anatomy, histology, and medical imaging.

Kenhub's videos use a combination of high-quality visuals, 3D animations, and engaging explanations to help students learn anatomy quickly and efficiently. They also provide quizzes and interactive learning tools to reinforce the material and help students retain the information.

Geeky Medics is a must-follow YouTube channel for medical students looking to hone their clinical skills and prepare for Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCEs). With over 300,000 subscribers, Geeky Medics offers a wide range of video tutorials on clinical examination techniques, practical procedures, and communication skills.

Their videos are clear, concise, and easy to follow, making it simple for students to learn and practice essential clinical skills. Geeky Medics also offers a free app and interactive quizzes to help medical students test their knowledge and improve their clinical abilities.

Armando Hasudungan's YouTube channel offers an extensive collection of videos on various medical and biology topics. With over 800,000 subscribers, his channel covers subjects such as immunology, microbiology, neuroscience, and more.

Armando's teaching style is unique and engaging, as he uses hand-drawn illustrations and animations to explain complex concepts in a simplified manner. His videos are not only informative but also visually appealing, making it easier for students to grasp and remember the material.

Armando's passion for teaching and his ability to make difficult topics more accessible make his channel an invaluable resource for medical students looking to expand their knowledge and understanding of various medical subjects.

In conclusion, these six YouTube channels offer high-quality, engaging, and informative content for medical students looking to enhance their medical knowledge and skills. By following these channels, students can gain a deeper understanding of complex medical concepts, improve their clinical abilities, and excel in their exams. So, don't miss out on these fantastic resources and start learning from the best YouTube channels for medical students today!

The AMSS is pleased to offer you this updated and expanded guide to assist in your learning. It's well worth your time, so be sure to check it out in full. Below you'll find online textbook banks, go-to resources for different specialities, gold-mines for most things medicine, MCQ banks, online lecture resources, podcasts frequented by medical students and more!

We're always looking to optimise this guide. So if you know of an awesome medical resource that's not listed below which you would like to recommend for the guide, please get in touch by emailing our Vice President (Education) via v...@amss.org.au.

Textbook Talk is an AMSS publication that aims to help you decide which are the best textbooks to buy. It is packed with information about the more commonly used textbooks, as well as recommendations from older students.

Search clinical eBooks, eJournals, practice guidelines, patient handouts, and cases on a wide area of clinical medicine in a single unified search engine. Also provides access to the Australian Medicines Handbook via the "Drugs" tab.

Check the eTG! Ever reliable, the Electronic Therapeutic Guidelines (eTG) comprehensively covers the up-to-date management of common disorders seen in clinical practise. The guidelines are independent, unbiased and are quotable in CBL and on the wards.

The AMH is an independent (not supported by drug companies), evidence-based Australian website/textbook containing information on just about every drug an Australian doctor is likely to see. Access is available via CANVAS, on the Exam Course for year level.

The South Australian Perinatal Practice Guidelines are clinical guidelines established by the Department of Health for the care of obstetric patients in South Australia. These guidelines are used and quoted extensively by clinicians at the Women's and Children's Hospital and are hence a definitive reference for diagnostic and management criteria.

A great go-to-source for all things kids in medicine. The RCH Clinical Practice Guidelines contain reliable assessment and management algorithms for all the common paediatrics conditions. Content is also accessible offline via the RCH phone app.

Sti.guidelines.org contains the official guidelines for the management of sexually transmitted infections in Australia. The guidelines are somehow both concise and comprehensive, covering important specific details such as requirements for notification and tests of cure.

This manual, from the Royal College of Pathologists of Australia, aims to provide useful guidelines for the use and selection of pathology tests. It describes how to select pathology tests and how to interpret the results. The Manual consists of several sections including: Clinical Problems, Pathology Tests and Pathology Decision Support Tools.

A great resource for pre-clinical and clinical students alike, Medscape contains thousands of free articles, ranging from diseases to investigations to drug profiles, written by experts, usually from the United States. Pre-clinical students have been known to get through entire CBL sessions with only a Medscape article, printed moments before the session is to begin, in their hands. Clinical students have been known to utilise the Medscape app to pass the time during long ward rounds. You'll need to create a free Medscape account to access. To use the Medscape app offline, click the dropdown menu in the top-left-hand corner of the screen >> data updates >> download clinical reference.

Once students start using it, many find that UpToDate is something that they can't live without. UpToDate is quite possibly a clinical student's best friend. It is widely available in the hospitals and it has a knack for containing just the right information you need, when you're desperately searching minutes before a ward round. There's also PLENTY in it for pre-clinical students too, particularly when specific clinical details cannot be found elsewhere.

BMJ Best Practice combines the latest evidence and expert opinion and presents it in a concise fashion. Useful for CBL and in the clinical years, this resource provides excellent detail regarding disease risk factors and differential diagnoses. There is also a drug database that contains hundreds of drugs alphabetically and is especially useful for understanding drugs and their adverse effects.

These useful resources are directed at General Practitioners but can be of great use to medical students as well. They contain articles focused on the clinical details of both disease profiles and investigations. A great place to start for third year CBL, due to its clinical focus.

These useful resources are directed at General Practitioners but can be of great use to medical students as well. They contain articles focused on the clinical details of both disease profiles and investigations. A great place to start for third year CBL, due to its clinical focus. You'll need to create a free medical student account to access.

Known for being the go-to ECG resource, Life in the Fast Lane (LITFL) is actually much more. It is the brainchild of an Dr Mike Cadogan, an emergency physician and passionate advocate of FOAM (Free Open Access 'Meducation'), and contains concise summaries of everything critical care and practise cases surrounding CXRs, ABGs, trauma, ECGs (of course) and more!

A one stop shop for succinct mechanisms underlying a wide variety of conditions with reliability generally ensured by the review of all materials undertaken by the University of Calgary. Mechanisms are generally of sufficient detail for examinations though can be insufficiently detailed for CBL. Make sure to check out the cardiology section, a gold-mine of useful mechanisms for CBL. Quick tip: if you can't find what you are looking for with the search engine (it can be very specific), try the contents menu.

The place to go when Calgary guide lacks the detail you need. McMaster's (often called pathophys.org) provides well referenced pathophysiology in a well explained easy to read format. They have particularly good sections for: ischaemic heart disease, heart failure, breast cancer, lung cancer and PCOS.

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