There are several characters and mechanisms employed to both organize the material and highlight important information.
- Each chapter begins with Just the facts to give readers an overview of what will be covered in the chapter.
- At the end of each chapter is a quick quiz that helps evaluate how well you've assimilated the information.
- Nurse
Joy appears in the margins to emphasize important points in the
text.
- Example: "A drug with a long half-life can take days to reach therapeutic blood levels."
- Interesting information
about how drugs originated, possible drugs of the future, and more appear in Pharm Facts sections.
- Example: "Putting a new stress on sertraline. The Food and Drug Administration recently approved sertraline hydrochloride (Zoloft) as the first drug for treating posttraumatic stress disorder..."
- Now
I get it! sections are well used to explain more complicated
issues and concepts, often with excellent illustrations and charts.
- Example: Section explaining and graphically demonstrating the dose-response curve.
- Example, Mr. Liver: "If I'm not working right, a drug doesn't get metabolized normally."
- Example, Mr. Neuron: "Adrenergic blocking agents block stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system."
- Example, Mr. Heart: "Stimulate beta receptors, and I'm likely to speed up."
- Example: "When a drug is said to be potentiated by another drug, the results are more potent the drug goes beyond its original potential."
- Example: Adverse reactions to cholinergic agonists.
- Example: Are beta-adrenergic blockers underused in the elderly?




