Includes leading anesthesiology texts, ultrasound, regional anesthesia, and advanced monitoring videos, more than 3,800 Q&A for in-service exams and boards, practice guidelines, patient cases, and more.
Offering the latest medical news, essential point-of-care drug and disease information, relevant professional education, including clinical procedures, and CME. Free registration required.
Database of citations and abstracts for biomedical literature from MEDLINE and additional life science journals, including clinical medicine and public health.
This link allows medical residents and all other UTK & UTHSC NetID holders the option to search PubMed and link to resources from Preston Medical Library, University of Tennessee-Knoxville, or UT Health Sciences Center. Note that you will not be able to see the three links if you are logged into MyNCBI.
"STAT!Ref lets you cross-search more than 35 medical and drug texts including popular texts from McGraw Hill, Mosby, Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins and more. Full text results provide the most relevant information every time." The license is for three concurrent users. Off-campus access requires that you register with the library.
Set of electronic resources accessible to anyone with an Internet connection in the state of Tennessee. Includes large multisubject databases, newspapers and reference ebooks, and nursing, allied health, physical therapy and psychology resources.
Embase is a highly versatile, multipurpose and up-to-date biomedical research database, used for systematic reviews. It covers the most important international biomedical literature from 1947 to the present day and all articles are indexed in depth using Elsevier's Life Science thesaurus Embase Indexing and EmtreeĀ®. NetID required.
NOTE: To export citations, an Elsevier profile is required; click Sign in and create a new account with a UTHSC email address.
See our Resources for Mobile Devices page for more information on Apps, Mobile-optimized websites, and accessing professional level content on mobile devices