Electrocardiography for the Family Physician: The EssentialsFamily physicians are often the first, and sometimes the only, point of contact for many patients within the health care system. The standard 12-lead electrocardiogram is one of the most common tests obtained and
interpreted by the family physician, with most of the physicians reading their own recordings and basing clinical decisions on their findings. It has been shown that family physicians can achieve proficiency in the interpretation of over 95 percent of all electrocardiogram findings seenin the primary care setting. Although computerized interpretation is widely available, it is considered unreliable in up to 20 percent of the cases, making competency and interpretation by family physicians an essential skill. This book provides the necessary skills for family physicians to use in interpreting electrocardiograms, both in their
offices and in the emergency rooms of their hospitals. It also should prove of value to other primary care physicians, as well as medical students and residents of nearly all medical specialties. As the subtitle states, this book is about the essential elements involved in
electrocardiographic interpretation. It is not all inclusive. However, it does cover the abnormalities most likely to be seen by family physicians in their everyday practice of medicine
GET IT HERERelated SubjectThe Ultimate Echo GuideComprehensive Electrocardiology - 2011 EditionKaplan USMLE Step 2 CK Cardiology Videos (2010)The ESC Textbook of Cardiovascular ImagingCritical Decisions in Emergency and Acute Care ElectrocardiographyMedstudy Internal Medicine Review: Core CurriculumECG-SAP III: Electrocardiography Self-Assessment ProgramHow to read ECG - Video Training