Primeinc.org Review:

PRIME® Continuing Medical Education - Live, Online, and Print CME/CE - PRIME is an ACCME accredited provider of continuing medical education for Physicians, Pharmacists, Nurses and Case Managers

primeinc.org

Country: North America, US, United States

City: 60607 Chicago, Illinois

  • myspaguy - Best tax software on the marketI purchased tax cut for 2009 tax year, I purchased hrblock for 2010 and decided it was superior. Accordingly, i purchased it this year as well. No problems on 3 different stations. Smooth install on xp and win7. Perhaps others should read the install readme file before they try to install. After reading some of these reviews, i pulled up the tech support phone line and after calling it, had someone on the phone in under 5 minutes. You can not go wrong with this software. We have a very complicated LP with 2 trusts as partners with pass through income to me. all 4 tax returns were completed with this software! Easiest software on the market.
  • J. Chung - The only book of its kind!I used this book when I volunteered at hospitals in Kenya and Papua New Guinea. While it is not a medical textbook, it is indispensable for the village healer. I don't understand the reviewers who gave this book one star just because they misunderstood the purpose of the book. The cover clearly states "Village" handbook. If you are looking for a family first aid book, this obviously won't do the job. If you are looking for a medical book to help you treat third-world villagers, there is no better book. At the hospital I worked at, there was a library of many health care books made for the third world, but there was nothing that compared to this book. The other books were more like watered down medical textbooks, trying to explain modern medicine for the under-educated. This book is full of common sense treatments that can be used by anyone, such as how to make your own oral rehydration fluid for dehydrated children (homemade Pedialyte for a fraction of the cost), how to tell the difference between marasmus and kwashiorkor, how to diagnose the different types of malaria, etc. I'm a doctor, and I still find information in this book that I can't find in the big text books. For the Third World, this book will always remain important and relevant.