TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Preface A1 - Simel, David L. A1 - Rennie, Drummond Y1 - 2016 N1 - T2 - The Rational Clinical Examination: Evidence-Based Clinical Diagnosis AB - I've never met a medical student who lacked passion for making a diagnosis. And, among all the diagnoses a student might make, clinching the case right at the bedside is the most treasured. The same holds true not only for physicians in practice but also for all those involved in caring for patients-physician assistants, nurses, and physical therapists must each constantly assess their patient and consider what's wrong. The Rational Clinical Examination series, published in JAMA since 1992 and collected in this book, should appeal to anyone who wonders about the meaning of a patient's symptoms and signs. Many indispensable textbooks instruct learners on "how" to elicit the medical history and perform the physical examination, but we suspect that, once the "how" is learned, clinicians only infrequently return to what was one of their favored textbooks during their training years. When I ask clinicians to recall the book they used for physical diagnosis class in medical school, there is no pause before they state DeGowin and DeGowin, Bates, Mosby, Schwartz, or another of a select few. We see The Rational Clinical Examination as an essential companion to, and not a replacement for, these time-honored texts of the "complete" medical history and physical examination. SN - PB - McGraw-Hill Education CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2024/04/19 UR - jamaevidence.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1170154819 ER -