First Aid For USMLE Step 1 2023 33rd Edition.
First Aid for the USMLE Step1 2023 33rd Edition pdf Free Download
Size: 258.86
How to Use This Book:
CONGRATULATIONS: You now possess the book that has guided nearly two million students to USMLE success
for over 30 years. With appropriate care, the binding should last the useful life of the book. Keep in mind that putting
excessive flattening pressure on any binding will accelerate its failure. If you purchased a book that you believe
is defective, please immediately return it to the place of purchase. If you encounter ongoing issues, you can also
contact Customer Service at our publisher, McGraw Hill.
START EARLY: Use this book as early as possible while learning the basic medical sciences. The first semester of
your first year is not too early! Devise a study plan by reading Section I: Guide to Efficient Exam Preparation, and
make an early decision on resources to use by checking Section IV: Top-Rated Review Resources. Note that First Aid
is neither a textbook nor a comprehensive review book, and it is not a panacea for inadequate preparation.
CONSIDER FIRST AID YOUR ANNOTATION HUB: Annotate this book with material from other resources,
such as class notes or comprehensive textbooks. This will keep all the high-yield information you need in one place.
Other tips on keeping yourself organized:
For best results, use fine-tipped ballpoint pens (eg, BIC Pro+, Uni-Ball Jetstream Sports, Pilot Drawing Pen,
Zebra F-301). If you like gel pens, try Pentel Slicci, and for markers that dry almost immediately, consider
Staedtler Triplus Fineliner, Pilot Drawing Pen, and Sharpies.
Consider using pens with different colors of ink to indicate different sources of information (eg, blue for
USMLE-Rx Step 1 Qmax, green for UWorld Step 1 Qbank, red for Rx Bricks).
Choose highlighters that are bright and dry quickly to minimize smudging and bleeding through the page
(eg, Tombow Kei Coat, Sharpie Gel).
Many students de-spine their book and get it 3-hole-punched. This will allow you to insert materials from other
sources, including curricular materials.
INTEGRATE STUDY WITH CASES, FLASH CARDS, AND QUESTIONS: To broaden your learning strategy,
consider integrating your First Aid study with case-based reviews (eg, First Aid Cases for the USMLE Step 1), flash
cards (eg, USMLE-Rx Step 1 Flash Facts), and practice questions (eg, the USMLE-Rx Step 1 Qmax). Read the
chapter in the book, then test your comprehension by using cases, flash cards, and questions that cover the same
topics. Maintain access to more comprehensive resources (eg, ScholarRx Bricks and USMLE-Rx Step 1 Express
videos) for deeper review as needed.
PRIME YOUR MEMORY: Return to your annotated Sections II and III several days before taking the USMLE
Step 1. The book can serve as a useful way of retaining key associations and keeping high-yield facts fresh in your
memory just prior to the exam. The Rapid Review section includes high-yield topics to help guide your studying.
CONTRIBUTE TO FIRST AID: Reviewing the book immediately after your exam can help us improve the next
edition. Decide what was truly high and low yield and send us your comments. Feel free to send us scanned images
from your annotated First Aid book as additional support. Of course, always remember that all examinees are under
agreement with the NBME to not disclose the specific details of copyrighted test material.
Contents:
Contributing Authors vii
Associate Authors viii
Faculty Advisors ix
Preface xi
Special Acknowledgments xii
General Acknowledgments xiii
How to Contribute xv
How to Use This Book xvii
Selected USMLE Laboratory Values xviii
First Aid Checklist for the USMLE Step 1 xx
Preface
With the 33rd edition of First Aid for the USMLE Step 1 we continue our commitment to providing students with
the most useful and up-to-date preparation guide for this exam. This edition represents an outstanding revision in
many ways, including:
73 entirely new or heavily revised high-yield topics reflecting evolving trends in the USMLE Step 1.
Extensive text revisions, new mnemonics, clarifications, and corrections curated by a team of 19 medical student
and resident physician authors who excelled on their Step 1 examinations, and verified by a team of expert
faculty advisors and nationally recognized USMLE instructors.
Updated with 148 new and revised diagrams and illustrations as part of our ongoing collaboration with
USMLE-Rx and ScholarRx (MedIQ Learning, LLC).
Updated with 159 new and revised photos to help visualize various disorders, descriptive findings, and basic
science concepts. Additionally, revised imaging photos have been labeled and optimized to show both normal
anatomy and pathologic findings.
Updated exam preparation advice for the current pass/fail scoring system of the USMLE Step 1, and Step 1
blueprint changes.
Updated photos of patients and pathologies to include a variety of skin colors to better depict real-world
presentations.
Revised pharmacology sections to include only those drugs currently approved for the US market.
Improved organization and integration of text, illustrations, clinical images, and tables throughout for focused
review of high-yield topics.
Updated Rapid Review section to better reflect exam contents by removing the ‘Classic/Relevant Treatments’
section and adding in a ‘Pathophysiology of Important Diseases’ section.
Revised ratings of current, high-yield review resources, with clear explanations of their relevance to USMLE
review. Replaced outdated resources with new ones recommended by Step takers.
Real-time Step 1 updates and corrections can be found exclusively on our blog, www.firstaidteam.com.
We invite students and faculty to share their thoughts and ideas to help us continually improve First Aid for the
USMLE Step 1 through our blog and collaborative editorial platform. (See How to Contribute, p. xv.)
Louisville Tao Le
Boracay Vikas Bhushan
Baltimore Connie Qiu
Kathmandu Anup Chalise
Athens Panagiotis Kaparaliotis
Atlanta Caroline Coleman
San Francisco Kimberly Kallianos
Special Acknowledgments:
This has been a collaborative project from the start. We gratefully acknowledge the thousands of thoughtful
comments, corrections, and advice of the many medical students, international medical graduates, and faculty who
have supported the authors in our continuing development of First Aid for the USMLE Step 1.
We provide special acknowledgment and thanks to the following individuals who made exemplary contributions
to this edition through our voting, proofreading, and crowdsourcing platform: Amalia D. Ardeljan, Heather Beyea,
Avneet Kaur, Yekaterina Khamzina, Alexandra Jan Mrani, and Ajay Ajit Pal Singh.
For support and encouragement throughout the process, we are grateful to Thao Pham, Jinky Flang, and Jonathan
Kirsch, Esq. Thanks to Louise Petersen for organizing and supporting the project. Thanks to our publisher, McGraw
Hill, for the valuable assistance of its staff, including Bob Boehringer, Jeffrey Herzich, Christina Thomas, Kristian
Sanford, and Don Goyette.
We are also very grateful to Dr. Fred Howell and Dr. Robert Cannon of Textensor Ltd for providing us extensive
customization and support for their powerful Annotate.co collaborative editing platform (www.annotate.co), which
allows us to efficiently manage thousands of contributions. Thanks to Dr. Richard Usatine and Dr. Kristine Krafts
for their outstanding image contributions. Thanks also to Jean-Christophe Fournet (www.humpath.com), Dr. Ed
Uthman, and Dr. Frank Gaillard (www.radiopaedia.org) for generously allowing us to access some of their striking
photographs.
For exceptional editorial leadership, enormous thanks to Megan Chandler. Special thanks to our indexer, Dr.
Anne Fifer. We are also grateful to our art manager, Susan Mazik, and illustrators, Stephanie Jones and Rachael
Joy, for their creative work on the new and updated illustrations. Lastly, tremendous thanks to our compositor,
GW Inc., especially Anne Banning, Gary Clark, Cindy Geiss, Denise Smith, and Gabby Sullivan.
Louisville Tao Le
Boracay Vikas Bhushan
Baltimore Connie Qiu
Kathmandu Anup Chalise
Athens Panagiotis Kaparaliotis
Atlanta Caroline Coleman
San Francisco Kimberly Kallianos
FAS1_2023_00_Frontmatter.indd 12 11/18
No comments:
Post a Comment
I will reply soon. Thanks for comment.