| Since this struck a note - you can find UCSFs list of textbooks here: https://meded.ucsf.edu/sites/meded.ucsf.edu/files/inline-fil... Start with Anatomy. And the basic anatomical form. Start with a problem you personally have. (Go to a doc if its serious!) Figure out your concentric anaotmy of hte issue, the pathology. Everytime you read a textbook it will push you to a new subject. Do this for at least 5 hours and you'll be able to relate to your doctor much better. If you want to know what a dcotor looks at for decision support - you can go to uptodate.com - I think they have a free trial for 3 days or something. The most essential idea is that a doctor is someone whose model of hte human body is much more realistic than yours. Thus as you learn medicine keep improving the model you have of your own body and how someone elses would be different from yours - for all major body systems - lymph, respiratory, nervous, endocrine , muscular, digestive, integumentary, urinay, excretory, circulatory etc. |