The sources for Emergency medicine are many, but primarily:
- The Emergency Medicine Manual 4th & 5th Editions by Robert Dunn
- Toxicology Handbook 2nd Edition by Murray, Daly, Little & Cadogan
- Web Mentor Library
- UpToDate
- eMedicine/Medscape
- Wheeless Online Textbook of Orthopaedics
- Rosen's Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice, 7th Edition
- Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine. A Comprehensive Study Guide, 7th Edition
- Mental Health for Emergency Departments – A Reference Guide. NSW Department of Health, Sydney, 2009.
- New South Wales Health publications & guidelines
- Cochrane Library Systematic Reviews
- Pearls of wisdom from websites such as Life In The Fast Lane and Academic Life in Emergency Medicine
- Many journals including: BMJ, EMJ, NEJM, and The Lancet
- http://www.freebookcentre.net/medical_books_download/Disaster-Planning.html
DataBases
- Centre for Evidence-based Medicine, University of Toronto.
- ‘Homesite’ of EBM, with a wealth of evidence resources. [Website]
- Cochrane Library – Includes four main databases
- Clinical Evidence. BMJ Evidence Centre, BMJ Publishing Group.
- UpToDate.
- Evidence-based, peer-reviewed topic-based information resource with 8300 topics in 16 specialties.
- Trip Database.
- Designed to allow rapid identification of the highest quality clinical evidence.
- Free registration. User-friendly, fast and comprehensive – TRIP Database Website
- BestBETS
- Brief, evidence-based answers to real-life clinical questions. Sorted by title or topic, plus other useful EBM resources – BestBets Website
- GoPubMed
- Very useful site for review of PubMed journals – the most simple overlay of what is generally a difficult site to navigate – GoPubMed Website
- Google or Google Scholar
- Free-text searches rather than Boolean. Improving all the time! Note though that articles are not arranged chronologically (unlike PubMed). Google Scholar Website
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