21 used & new from $26.62

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
 
Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine (2 Volume Set) (Vol 1 & 2)
 
See larger image
 

Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine (2 Volume Set) (Vol 1 & 2) (Hardcover)

~ Irwin M. Freedberg (Author), Arthur Z. Eisen (Author), Klauss Wolff (Author), K. Frank Austen (Author), Lowell A. Goldsmith (Author), Stephen Katz (Author)
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


Available from these sellers.


8 new from $53.25 13 used from $26.62

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover $352.82  
Hardcover, May 23, 2003 --  
Paperback --  
Multimedia CD --  
There is a newer edition of this item:
Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine (2 Volumes)Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine (2 Volumes) 2.7 out of 5 stars (9)
$352.82
Usually ships in 9 to 13 days

Customers Viewing This Page May Be Interested in These Sponsored Links

  (What's this?)
   Fitzpatrick Dermatology opens new browser window
www.Preisvergleich.de/   -   Preisvergleich & Testberichte zum Thema Fitzpatrick Dermatology!
   Fitzpatrick Dermatology opens new browser window
www.Shopping.de   -   Fitzpatrick Dermatology bis 41% günstiger: Jetzt bestellen!


Editorial Reviews

Review

"The book is well formatted and easy to read. It summarizes all the crucial recent studies that have a major impact in our approach to treatment of hypertension in diabetes mellitus." "4 stars" (Doody's )

It has been said that dermatology is the most inclusive specialty because it deals not only with the skin but also with everything that the skin contains and touches. There's some truth to that. For instance, where else can you find the editors of a medical textbook, as in Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine, waxing proudly in the preface about including fresh material on anthrax, smallpox, and Botox? In other words, the field considers its domain to range from the war on terrorism to our narcissistic culture. Happily, the Botox chapter does not include tips on how to throw a "Botox party."

There is also a new chapter on "Evidence-Based Dermatology." I must admit that when I first heard of the evidence-based approach, I wasn't much impressed with its novelty, seeming to remember at least one old-timer who made a comment about experiment being treacherous and judgment difficult (Hippocrates). But the author does a good job of defending the system, and in an honest self-referential bit of criticism of textbooks, he points out that most tend to "reflect the biases and shortcomings of the experts who write them," are about 2 years out of date by publication, and are "narrative reviews that do not consider the quality of the evidence reported." Evidence itself, of course, is as indisputably wholesome as apple pie—it's how you interpret the evidence that matters.

This edition remains heavily invested in basic science, which is becoming daily more of a misnomer as skin biology reveals an ever increasing complexity. The first part, almost 15%, is given over to anatomy, physiology, immunology, molecular biology, and so forth, and there's much more interspersed throughout the clinical chapters. These chapters have shown the most profound changes over time, with progressive improvement at each turn. Whereas the first edition relegated color clinical photographs to a relatively thin "atlas" section, this edition features them on seemingly every page. Color abounds, and the quality of the illustrations is excellent. Indeed, the difference between the first and latest edition is so great that you'd never guess at the lineage if you did not look at the titles.

With all the new material, I was astonished to discover that something unheard of had apparently occurred in medical publishing: the sixth edition is shorter than the fifth! And not by just a little: hundreds of pages have evaporated. I compared typefaces, considered a gross error in the pagination, had a colleague check my eyesight, and finally contacted the senior editor, who gave me the lowdown: they did it on purpose.

Having decided that the book had grown "too long, too heavy, too redundant," a 2-year effort was launched in which 10% was cut by "rigid editing, eliminating as much duplication as possible, cutting long, long lists of references." Another improvement was making both volumes roughly equal in size (the considerable inequality of which had always annoyed me) and using a thinner but ample stock paper. The overall weight has been reduced from 22 lb to a more portable 17 lb.

All in all, this sixth edition of Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine is the premier textbook of dermatology, a bargain if there ever was one, and a blessing for those of us with derangements in our rotator cuffs.

Michael B. Brodin, MD
Monroe, NY (Journal of American Medical Association )

It has been said that dermatology is the most inclusive specialty because it deals not only with the skin but also with everything that the skin contains and touches. There's some truth to that. For instance, where else can you find the editors of a medical textbook, as in Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine, waxing proudly in the preface about including fresh material on anthrax, smallpox, and Botox? In other words, the field considers its domain to range from the war on terrorism to our narcissistic culture. Happily, the Botox chapter does not include tips on how to throw a "Botox party." There is also a new chapter on "Evidence-Based Dermatology." I must admit that when I first heard of the evidence-based approach, I wasn't much impressed with its novelty, seeming to remember at least one old-timer who made a comment about experiment being treacherous and judgment difficult (Hippocrates). But the author does a good job of defending the system, and in an honest self-referential bit of criticism of textbooks, he points out that most tend to "reflect the biases and shortcomings of the experts who write them," are about 2 years out of date by publication, and are "narrative reviews that do not consider the quality of the evidence reported." Evidence itself, of course, is as indisputably wholesome as apple pie--it's how you interpret the evidence that matters. This edition remains heavily invested in basic science, which is becoming daily more of a misnomer as skin biology reveals an ever increasing complexity. The first part, almost 15%, is given over to anatomy, physiology, immunology, molecular biology, and so forth, and there's much more interspersed throughout the clinical chapters. These chapters have shown the most profound changes over time, with progressive improvement at each turn. Whereas the first edition relegated color clinical photographs to a relatively thin "atlas" section, this edition features them on seemingly every page. Color abounds, and the quality of the illustrations is excellent. Indeed, the difference between the first and latest edition is so great that you'd never guess at the lineage if you did not look at the titles. With all the new material, I was astonished to discover that something unheard of had apparently occurred in medical publishing: the sixth edition is shorter than the fifth! And not by just a little: hundreds of pages have evaporated. I compared typefaces, considered a gross error in the pagination, had a colleague check my eyesight, and finally contacted the senior editor, who gave me the lowdown: they did it on purpose. Having decided that the book had grown "too long, too heavy, too redundant," a 2-year effort was launched in which 10% was cut by "rigid editing, eliminating as much duplication as possible, cutting long, long lists of references." Another improvement was making both volumes roughly equal in size (the considerable inequality of which had always annoyed me) and using a thinner but ample stock paper. The overall weight has been reduced from 22 lb to a more portable 17 lb. All in all, this sixth edition of Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine is the premier textbook of dermatology, a bargain if there ever was one, and a blessing for those of us with derangements in our rotator cuffs. Michael B. Brodin, MD Monroe, NY Journal of American Medical Association 20040121 "The book is well formatted and easy to read. It summarizes all the crucial recent studies that have a major impact in our approach to treatment of hypertension in diabetes mellitus." "4 stars" Doody's 20031003

Product Description

still the Mother of all dermatology textbooks…a ‘must have' for any dermatologist's library. *

NOW IN A STATE-OF-THE-ART NEW EDITION

The up-to-the-minute sixth edition of the world-renowned Fitz –
*Encyclopedic in its scope with 280 definitive chapters in 37 sections covering every aspect, every problem, every treatment strategy related to human skin
*Packed with 2,000 full-color photographs of the highest quality -- and hundreds of topic-clarifying line drawings
*Presents the expertise of over 300 world-class contributors – 50 new to this edition
*Reorganized and expanded, with updated content throughout
*Features the definitive chapter on smallpox and complications of vaccination
*Includes 10 timely new chapters on topics ranging from photoimmunology to retinoids and botox

Reorganized and edited for total clarity and ease of use, the sixth edition's coverage of dermatologic conditions and systemic diseases presenting with skin manifestations provides for each disorder:
*Historical Aspects of the Condition
*Epidemiology
*Clinical Manifestations
*Laboratory Findings
*Pathology
*Treatment and Prognosis

The sixth edition of Fitz gives you the most timely, authoritative, and comprehensive guide to the entire spectrum of dermatologic science, diagnosis, treatment, and management.

*Archives of Dermatology on 5th Edition


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 2872 pages
  • Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional; 6 edition (May 23, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0071380760
  • ISBN-13: 978-0071380768
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 10.2 x 4.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 16.9 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,069,992 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)


      More About the Authors

      Discover books, learn about writers, read author blogs, and more.

      Tag this product

       (What's this?)
      Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
      Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items.
      This is not phishing, this is art!
      Read more here what this is about.
       

      Sell a Digital Version of This Book in the Kindle Store

      If you are a publisher or author and hold the digital rights to a book, you can sell a digital version of it in our Kindle Store. Learn more

       

      Customer Reviews

      9 Reviews
      5 star:
       (3)
      4 star:
       (1)
      3 star:   (0)
      2 star:   (0)
      1 star:
       (5)
       
       
       
       
       
      Average Customer Review
      2.7 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
       
       
       
       
      Share your thoughts with other customers:
      Most Helpful Customer Reviews

       
      12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
      1.0 out of 5 stars Most user-unfriendly book in a long time, February 11, 2008
      By DermMD (Sydney, Australia) - See all my reviews
      I had been looking forward to the new edition of Fitzpatrick after the announcements of new, updated format, improved web-content, etc. What a disappointment! Only part of the text is actually in the book, additional content only to be found on the web-version, which is both cumbersome to use (PDF version of the book rather than html with hyperlinks) and appears to deliver only part of what was promised (i.e. there is no way to copy the figures and paste into powerpoint). As a bonus, the entire text is littered with "e" symbols indicating additional e-only text, which makes for quite annoying reading and is just plain ugly.

      The general unattractiveness of the layout is compounded by the 3-column design, which means that practically every word longer than 10 letters (i.e. most of derm nomenclature) is hyphenated at least once (often twice). Not the way forward for residents and practicioners alike, methinks. Figure quality is definitely below the Bolognia standard and after reviewing several chapters it is obvious that a lot of the material is duplicated throughout both volumes (amazingly, the same picture that looks fine in volume I will be off-color in volume II and vice versa, which is quite annoying in a field like dermatology, which relies heavily on visual clues).

      If this is the future of textbooks, then I hope I will be able to get on without using any. In the meantime, I shall return my copy of Fitz and go with the new edition of Bolognia.
      Help other customers find the most helpful reviews  
      Was this review helpful to you?
      | Permalink


       
      9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
      1.0 out of 5 stars false advertisement over e-edition, update just OK, November 30, 2007
      Very unhappy with purchase
      1. originally publisher just sent volume 1 (not through amazon)
      2. documentation online and even the back cover of the book claims it includes e-edition with 'ability to annotate text' and use pictures for presentations. THIS IS NOT TRUE! It does include a download for one copy of the text to adobe digital edition... but you CAN NOT annotate the text or copy the pictures. I contacted the publisher and they say this is only the case if you purchase the additional online yearly subscription (this is CLEARLY NOT as advertised).
      3. You CAN NOT use the e-edition on a handheld of any kind- as is CLEARLY pictured on the website. I contacted the publisher several weeks ago and all they said is that it was an error and they will remove it from their website... it is still there.

      If you ask me they tried too hard to get this book out on time and the result is an edition that has sloppy errors even on the back hard cover of the text. When it comes to content..it seems OK. Not clearly any better than previous editions. Just in color. Many chapter are just so, so in quality. Very, very annoying that citations are online.... I have a feeling as more people purchase this book there will be more people unhappy with it and their 'e-edition' and just return it and go with Bolognia.
      Help other customers find the most helpful reviews  
      Was this review helpful to you?
      | Permalink


       
      5.0 out of 5 stars Easy to read and practical, June 11, 2009
      I am a resident of dermatology, for my tests i have to read the hole book. when i saw this new edition i was very pleased.
      Compared to others editions it has more comparative tables so is easier to make diferences between diseases that are alike, also brings new algorithms that makes easier to understand the evolution and what do you spect to find.
      the chapter of embiogenesis and the part of inmunology in some chapters are also illustrated (the last one does not bring those illustrations.
      Its true, it cames in three collums, but the letter is big enough for read it, also i prefer that that three o 4 volumes.
      in comparison of the bologna, this one brings more diseases.
      Help other customers find the most helpful reviews  
      Was this review helpful to you?
      | Permalink

      Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
       See all 9 customer reviews...
       
       
       
      Most Recent Customer Reviews

      1.0 out of 5 stars Disaster
      Trying to purchase this two volume set through AMAZON was a DISASTER! The order was shipped and only one of the two volumes arrived. Read more
      Published on January 13, 2008 by M. Sussman

      1.0 out of 5 stars unable to get complete order
      We ordered this twice from Amazon. Each time, it came with only one of two volumes. When calling in to correct this, each time the assistant was unable to figure out how to get us... Read more
      Published on December 23, 2007 by M. G. Sweet

      1.0 out of 5 stars Two Volumes
      I paid for two volumes but only came the first volume. I was deceived.
      I want the second volume or my money back.
      Published on December 21, 2007 by Marco A. Laufer

      5.0 out of 5 stars This is the best version of this already great book!!!!
      I have relied on this book for years to keep me up to date on the science and practice of dermatology. Read more
      Published on December 20, 2007 by Leslie Baumann MD

      5.0 out of 5 stars Very practical approach,simple,excellent illustrations
      I have read this book alot during exams,an excellent book,easy to understand,too the point,excellent illustrations. Read more
      Published on September 9, 1999 by Dr.Azeem Alam Khan

      4.0 out of 5 stars Puede mejorar el formato, aumentar los síndromes clásicos.
      El hecho de que los volúmenes sean tan grandes empeoran el manejo del mismo. Falta más información sobre síndromes dermatológicos clásicos, fundamentalmente congénitos. Read more
      Published on March 17, 1999

      This is not phishing, this is art!
      Read more here what this is about.
      Only search this product's reviews

       See all 9 customer reviews...


      Customer Discussions

      New! See all customer communities, and bookmark your communities to keep track of them.
      This product's forum
      See all discussions...

      Listmania!


      So You'd Like to...



      Look for Similar Items by Category


      Look for Similar Items by Subject

      Search Books by subject:













      i.e., each book must be in subject 1 AND subject 2 AND ...
       

      Feedback

      If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
       Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
      Is there any other feedback you would like to provide? Click here

      Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.



      Your Recent History

       (What's this?)