Stedman's Medical Dictionary

Stedman's Medical Dictionary is a professional medical dictionary developed for medical students, physicians, researchers, and medical language specialists. Entries include medical terms, abbreviation, acronyms, measurements, and more. Pronunciation and word etymology (showing mostly Latin and Greek prefixes and roots) are provided with most definitions. Stedman’s Medical Dictionary and related products are available with subscription on Stedman's Online.

History

First produced as Dunglison’s New Dictionary of Medical Science and Literature in 1833 by Robley Dunglison (1789–1869). Robley Dunglison was a professor of medicine at the University of Virginia. He was the personal physician to presidents Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Jackson. In 1903 Thomas Lathrop Stedman became editor and made thorough revisions. The first edition of Stedman’s Medical Dictionary was published in 1911.[1] Additional versions include Stedman's Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing, Stedman's Medical Abbreviations, Acronyms & Symbols, Stedman's Pocket Medical Dictionary, and Stedman's Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions.[2]

Editions

The current edition is the 28th Edition, published in 2005. This edition added over 5,000 new terms and definitions to total to more than 107,000 entries.[3] It succeeds the 27th Edition, which was published in 2000.

Areas of coverage

gollark: Websocket does guarantee ordering I believe, it runs over TCP.
gollark: It might be worth adding a limited multiserver thing though.
gollark: Well, the meta fields are dubiously useful I guess, error reporting is useful if your implementation breaks, and the wildcard channel is designed to reduce required trust via giving everyone snooping powers equivalent to that of the person running the skynet server.
gollark: Perhaps there are other worthwhile features it lacks.
gollark: I should probably fix it to use modern™ asynchronous IO things on the backend, and to incorporate lessons from SPUDNET like "actually doing autoreconnect at all".

References

  1. "Thomas Lathrop Stedman". HighLights: A Quarterly Publication for Health Science Booksellers (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins). Winter 2005. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-03-20. Retrieved 2008-04-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Stedman's Online | Home". stedmansonline.com. Retrieved 2020-01-28.
  3. "Stedman's Medical Dictionary". shop.lww.com. Retrieved 2020-01-28.
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