I'm not a medical student, nor am I interested in pursuing that career choice. This may already mean that I'm in the wrong place, but I couldn't think of better forum or sub-forum to ask this question.
I want to know what some of the best, most concise books are on certain medical subjects, for the purpose of attaining a decent overview of how different bodily systems work, what goes wrong and how, etc. I understand that this is an extraordinarily vast subject, so I'm asking only for what would be the most efficient overview for practical knowledge in one's own life.
You may say that it would be irresponsible for a layman to try to diagnose his own problems, assess his own symptoms, or come up with his own treatment, and I certainly agree. If I ever present with a major medical problem, I will certainly seek professional advice and treatment. I'm not some crazy person trying to become a "doctor" without going through the responsible track. I'm just looking for how to build a practical knowledge base for my own life.
I remembering thinking about this sometime in the past, like maybe a year or so ago, and coming up with books like Clinically Oriented Anatomy and Netter's Atlas, both of which I'm sure everyone here will know about. But I'm sure there are others, or perhaps these are overkill for my purpose, or whatever, which is why I'm posing this question to a community that should be able to give me solid advice.
Sometimes it's difficult to know whether certain problems you have even are problems, for example because they've been with you for longer than you remember, or came about in a way that didn't seem alarming. This plus a thousand other things suggest that even those not interested in a medical career should get a solid overview of the science, that is unless they have the cash to get constant checkups for every little symptom that may not even be an issue at all.
If this is in the wrong place, feel free to move it, lock it, or delete it. But I would appreciate an answer from those who would know. Thanks.
I want to know what some of the best, most concise books are on certain medical subjects, for the purpose of attaining a decent overview of how different bodily systems work, what goes wrong and how, etc. I understand that this is an extraordinarily vast subject, so I'm asking only for what would be the most efficient overview for practical knowledge in one's own life.
You may say that it would be irresponsible for a layman to try to diagnose his own problems, assess his own symptoms, or come up with his own treatment, and I certainly agree. If I ever present with a major medical problem, I will certainly seek professional advice and treatment. I'm not some crazy person trying to become a "doctor" without going through the responsible track. I'm just looking for how to build a practical knowledge base for my own life.
I remembering thinking about this sometime in the past, like maybe a year or so ago, and coming up with books like Clinically Oriented Anatomy and Netter's Atlas, both of which I'm sure everyone here will know about. But I'm sure there are others, or perhaps these are overkill for my purpose, or whatever, which is why I'm posing this question to a community that should be able to give me solid advice.
Sometimes it's difficult to know whether certain problems you have even are problems, for example because they've been with you for longer than you remember, or came about in a way that didn't seem alarming. This plus a thousand other things suggest that even those not interested in a medical career should get a solid overview of the science, that is unless they have the cash to get constant checkups for every little symptom that may not even be an issue at all.
If this is in the wrong place, feel free to move it, lock it, or delete it. But I would appreciate an answer from those who would know. Thanks.