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Welcome
Welcome back to the most comprehensive and trusted health sciences collection development tool! Doody's Review Service provides extensive tools to allow you to research titles and keep up-to-date with the latest books in medicine, nursing, allied health, and more.
Doody's Core Titles 2025 available April 15
Doody’s Core Titles 2025 published on April 15, 2025. The 22nd edition of the most critical collection development tool in the health sciences features 2,436 unique titles selected in 126 unique specialties, including new areas: Osteopathic Medicine and Health Humanities.
NEW Doody's Special Topics List Published
Log in now to view the LGBTQ+ Health Doody’s Special Topics List published on April 1, 2025. Published quarterly with the help of our talented Editorial Board and expert List Selectors, we hope Doody’s Special Topics Lists will aid in your collection development efforts. Log in today to learn more and view each list.
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Introduction Epistemonikos is an open access, multilingual, health decision-making tool that is freely available to anyone with internet access. The website is maintained by the Epistemonikos Foundation, a nonprofit organization based in Santiago, Chile. Originally called the Epistemonikos Database, it was founded in 2012 with the admirable goal of creating an easy to use and accessible global repository containing the best available evidence in healthcare. It purports to be a “living project” with collaborators from all over the world helping users to find, appraise, and disseminate health-related knowledge…
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When someone experiences the loss of a limb or severe facial disfigurement, one of their options may be vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA), which transfers a graft containing multiple tissues transferred as a functional unit. Using VCA to restore the functionality and aesthetics of a lost upper limb or disfigured face is a profound and life-altering gift; however, the process and ...
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Diagnosis is central to medicine. It creates order, explains illness, identifies treatments, and predicts outcomes. In Putting a Name to It, Annemarie Jutel presents medical diagnosis as more than a mere clinical tool, but as a social phenomenon with the potential to deepen our understanding of health, illness, and disease. Jutel outlines how the sociology of diagnosis should function ...
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