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Reading List For Health Care Subject

Can someone list the MCQ books per subject for PG medical entrance?

First and most important thing is to read a guide book written by subject specialist. There are almost 15–20 books in every subject. 4–5 standard books. Every 2–3–4 years they change edition. And answer of MCQ changes according to these advances. Do you think a person who is writing a book for 10 subjects can refer all standard books new edition in a year and change accordingly!?!? But a person can do this if he has only 1 subject to follow.Anatomy - Rajesh Kaushal (Big-standard) /Ravi Raj (small-consiced)Physiology - S. Krishna Kumar (more clinical-AIIMS) / Saumen Manna (More one liner-Neet)Biochemistry - Rebecca James (Please don't read anything else) / Smily PuruthaPharmacology - Ranjan Kumar Patel (updated with recent advance) / Gobind Rai Garg (Both conceptual)Pathology - Devesh Mishra (Everything covered) / Praveen Kumar /Sushant SoniMicrobiology - Apurba Shastry (Very big) / Microns by CBS (Lesser mcqs but good content)Forensic Medicine - J magendran (Nothing else needed) / Sumit shethMedicine - Mukesh Bhatiya (Informative) + Ajay Mathur MCQ (Harrison based) / Mudit Khanna/ Deepak Marwah (Good explanation of MCQs)Surgery - Pritesh Singh (Big-monotonus) / Surgery Sixer (Concised - more updated)PSM - Vivek jain / Mukhtmohit SinghObs and Gynae - Sakshi Arora / Punit Bhojani (Only quick revision - Neet)ENT - Manisha Budhiraja / Sanjay AgrwalOpthalmology - Utsav Bansal (Conceptual) / Ruchi Rai (Fast revision) / Sudha Sharma (only if no time)Pediatrics - Taruna Mehra (Everything covered in concised manner) / Singaraman (well explained with more images)Orthopaedics - Apurv Mehra (Believe him blindly in controversy)Dermatology - Saurabh Jindal / Manish SoniRadiology - MAK radiology (Lots of concepts and images) / Sumer Seth/Rajat JainPsychiatry - Praveen TripathiAnaesthetia - Class notes / DBMCI book / Ajay YadavImage Based - PHOTON by Vivek JainBooks I wrote in bold are some books with no alternative. In other subjecs you can find 5% more or less same content. But these books are not possible to be replaced.More important thing in selection is writing and reading style. Whichever book you enjoy reading and recall is best for you.For specific exams:NIMHANS : Omkarnath for recent papers + Prmod KS for notes + DAMS QB for practiceJIPMER : Arun BabuPGI : Manoj ChaudharyAiims : AIIMS made easyFor quick revision Sure success magic is good.

What is the definition of author card, title card and subject card?

back when libraries used card catalogs they would be divided into Author, Title & Subject.

If you went to the card catalog and pulled the Author Card, Title card and the subject card. then you would have every reference for that book from the catalog

1.Choose a general subject for an historical investigation 1500 word research paper.?

2.Limit the subject and write the limited subject below.
3.Find and read a general article on the subject. List the title and author of the article and the source from which it came (title of book, magazine, journal; include the date of publication and name of publisher).
4.Write a brief summary of the information you have discovered.

What does "No Deductible" mean on Health Insurance?

A deductible is an amount you have to pay before the insurance kicks in and starts paying it's portion. You could still have a co pay or a coinsurance (the difference being a copay is a flat amount, for instance $10 for each office visit, while coinsurance is a percentage, 10 percent of the bill), so you might want to ask your insurance company if it isn't clear.

Also, you should make sure that the part your reading applies where you're going. For instance, if you go In Network (to a dr or hospital that has a contract with your insurance) you'll probably only have to pay a copay, or coinsurance and you'll only have to pay what the insurance says they can bill you for. If you go Out of Network (to a dr or hospital that does not have a contract with your insurance) you'll probably have to pay a deductible and also have to pay any difference between what your insurance says you should pay and what the dr or hospital says they are charging. This is because they are not bound by a contract and can pretty much bill whatever they want. In network providers can only bill what their contract says they can. So when you're reading your benefits make sure you are distinguising between the In Network Benefits and the Out of Network Benefits, as they are usually drastically different. If it doesn't list anything as "Out of Network" chances are you have an "HMO" type plan and don't have any Out of Network coverage, which means you would have to pay the ENTIRE cost of any services you get from a non-contracted provider.

Eating alone in school cafeteria advice?

I am a freshman in college and I have no friends. It’s not as bad as it was in high school but it’s still kind of embarrassing eating in the cafeteria alone. It seems like everyone else has friends. I just stopped going there but I have a few times left on my card and like 3 weeks left in the semester.

How do people even make friends in university? The only person I talked to for the past few months is my mom when I call to tell her how much I hate this university. This whole ordeal has taken a toll on my mental health.

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