
Exercises in Human Physiology (Preparatory to Clinical Work).
By Sir Thomas Lewis. Price, $1.25. Pp. 103, with 8 illustrations. London: The Macmillan Company, 1945.
Arch Intern Med. 1947;80(1):144.
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Sir Thomas Lewis has long advocated that in addition to the usual studies in physiology the student should also be trained in human physiology as seen in the normal human subject, and that he should learn what is the normal base line from which derivation might be judged. He has stated elsewhere that all the problems of clinical practice are amenable to solution by the same physiologic line of approach that one learns in the physiology laboratory.
This little volume is a series of exercises in physiology of the normal human being. It can be recommended to the student and to his teacher, and to those in clinical practice as well.
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