The Australian Medicines Handbook is an independent, evidence-based source of drug information relevant to Australian clinical practice. Published annually (current edition is 2019), it is a recommended text for pharmacy, nursing and medical programs throughout Australia.
AMH is organised in chapters, then grouped according to properties such as pharmacological class or therapeutic use.
Cross-references aid navigation between sections (including Drugs, Interactions, and Therapeutics) and point out additional information, both within the Handbook, and to other publications, such as clinical guidelines. The AMH also includes selected calculators.
Our licence allows for 3 concurrent users.
The Australian Injectable Drugs Handbook is a result of extensive collaboration between pharmacists and nurses. It offers concise, referenced information, based on published information available at the time of writing and includes information sourced from manufacturers, textbooks, internet databases and primary literature, commonly needed by nurses and pharmacists when preparing and giving an injectable medicine.
It is a comprehensive reference of over 450 injectable medicines, organised as Drug Monographs, including 65 antineoplastic medicines.
The AIDH is not a compendium of every conceivable pharmacological and pharmaceutical aspect of each medicine listed. It does not cover information about dose ranges or adverse effects other than those related to giving the medicine. It includes limited information about intravenous administration of medicines to infants and children.
Our licence allows for 5 concurrent users.
Rehabilitation Reference Center is a comprehensive collection of evidence-based information for rehabilitation professionals, in the disciplines of physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy/pathology. You can access RRC via our A-Z Databases list.
The Drug Information section in Rehabilitation Reference Center includes information on more than 11,700 represented medicines, separate drug monographs for systemic topical and EENT (eye, ear, nose ,and throat) drug formulations, drug interactions, cautions, toxicity, extensive dosage, and methods of administration.
MIMS Annual