Reddit mentions: The best osteopathy books

We found 5 Reddit comments discussing the best osteopathy books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 4 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

1. OMT Review 3rd Edition

    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
OMT Review 3rd Edition
Specs:
Height10.75 Inches
Length8.25 Inches
Number of items1
Weight2.29 Pounds
Width1 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

2. Atlas of Osteopathic Techniques (Nicholas, Atlas of Osteopathic Techniques)

Used Book in Good Condition
Atlas of Osteopathic Techniques (Nicholas, Atlas of Osteopathic Techniques)
Specs:
Height10.75 Inches
Length8.25 Inches
Number of items1
Weight2.95198968818 Pounds
Width1 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

4. Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine

    Features:
  • Lww
Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine
Specs:
Height11.25 Inches
Length8.75 Inches
Number of items1
Weight5.74965579296 Pounds
Width2 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

🎓 Reddit experts on osteopathy books

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where osteopathy books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 6
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1

idea-bulb Interested in what Redditors like? Check out our Shuffle feature

Shuffle: random products popular on Reddit

Top Reddit comments about Osteopathy:

u/KenjiTheSnackriice · 6 pointsr/medicalschool

I would not use COMBANK as your only source to test your knowledge, but I find that it was OK in regards to difficulty and especially the style of questions asked. If it's a management question, just skip it and don't let it bother you. The multi-part questions were very accurate to the actual test.

Most of my classmates preferred COMQUEST for their questions due to theirs being "more difficult", but honestly, 90% of us went through UWORLD in its entirety, then did some of COMBANK/QUEST to get used to the shitty wording and format for COMLEX.

If I had any advice, DO ALL THE OMT QUESTIONS in both banks (if you have them) or any sort of paper review that you have. The "green book" as my class called it was pretty much my only study material for OMT. These are free and easy points, so don't miss them!

Good luck! I would also suggest you take the tutorial time to chill the fuck out and take some deep breathes. People say if they go right into it, they are so pumped up or nervous that they can't even keep a sentence in their head.

u/ReCkLeSsX · 1 pointr/medicalschool

There's a lot you can do to figure out what would work best for you, but specifically for the OMT component of COMLEX, be sure to throw in a couple of read-throughs of Savarese: http://www.amazon.com/OMT-Review-Edition-Robert-Savarese/dp/0967009014

u/crashXCI · 2 pointsr/medicine

Nicholas Atlas of Osteopathic Techniques is our textbook for pre-clinical years and has most of the foundational techniques we learn, as well as a lot of the theory behind each kind of technique. I would stay away from most of the cervical techniques and HVLA (aka making stuff pop) until you have somebody that can kind of walk you through it.

u/EatMyShitDO · 1 pointr/medicalschool

> Is there a "weird stuff of medicine" book we can read or something?

Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine

I actually didn't think Level 1 was all that bad. Tons of buzz words and random shit, no pathophysiology, but it was pretty manageable.