Anatomy & Physiology Made Easy + Medical Terminology cover art

Anatomy & Physiology Made Easy + Medical Terminology

2-in-1 Study Bundle for Nursing & Healthcare Students: A Complete Beginner-Friendly Guide to Body Systems, Essential Medical Terms, and Fast On-the-Go Review for Class, Exams, and Clinical Work

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Anatomy & Physiology Made Easy + Medical Terminology

By: Darrell Connolly
Narrated by: Greg Bond
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About this listen

Feeling overwhelmed by anatomy, physiology, and medical terms?

Anatomy & Physiology Made Easy + Medical Terminology is a 2-in-1 study bundle that breaks everything down into simple, clear lessons you can actually remember—without slogging through dense textbooks.

You’ll review every major body system, learn medical terms step by step, and test your understanding with quick checks so you know what’s sinking in before class, exams, or clinicals.

This bundle is ideal for pre-nursing and nursing students, medical assistants, EMTs, CNAs, and anyone returning to school who needs a fast, friendly refresher.

Inside, you’ll find:

  • Easy explanations of anatomy & physiology.
  • Clear breakdowns of all major body systems.
  • Step-by-step medical terminology lessons using prefixes, suffixes, and root words.
  • Helpful summaries and quick review sections.
  • Real-world examples that connect lessons to clinical practice.

You don’t need a science background—just a guide that gets to the point and respects your time.

Use this bundle to prep for exams, your first term of nursing school, clinicals, or a new healthcare job.

Scroll up and start making anatomy, physiology, and medical terminology finally click.

©2025 Darrell Connolly (P)2026 Darrell Connolly
Study Guides & Test Preparation Student Physiology
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Listener received this title free

A very practical guide, simple and interesting!

Has a good structure, is logical and a pleasure to listen to!.

I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.

Interesting and easy to follow!

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Listener received this title free

These are two books written by a nurse sharing their own system for learning necessary terms. A reaonable case is made for the importance of concise, accurate information to be shared in healthcare settings. It also advocates that correct pronunciation is needed for credibility and demonstration of understanding. The first book is aimed at nurses and non-medical personnel. It starts logically by explaining the anatomical position and where different parts of the body are located. An early example of the numerous errors, omissions, mis-information and incororrect advice is omitting all mention of the liver when describing the organs located within the abdominal cavity. The next section goes onto physiology and then back to anatomy and terminology. The main method for remembering seems to be repeating the information with the words in a different order. The author boasts how grateful colleagues were to be given this book, so it seems too late to revise, re-write and correct the numerous errors.
The second book is more targetted at medical students as it covers medical terminology. Any medical student relying on this book for their studies would be very embarrassed. Indeed, an early part of the book acknowledges there are other books available which are more comprehensive and accepted as reliable sources. Its main claim is to be more accessible for studying and revising. An example of incomplete and misleading information is telling the reader that medical terms are based on Greek words, which is why they don't follow the rules of English in their prefixes, suffixes and plurals.. Reader, most are based on Latin. An example of bad editing leading to mis-information is saying the genetic condition leading to neurological problems in later life is called Huntington's infection. This mistake (no infection involved) was repeated when telling of Parkinson's disease.
The narrator is not the author and mangles many of the pronunciations and in so doing can change the meaning. An example was talking about abnormal heart rhythm due to a problem in the heart's upper chamber - atrial fibrillation and describing it as arterial fibrillation. Imitating this narrator's pronunciation of many of the terms would certainly embarrass you at interview or with colleagues.
Too many errors and poor editing (if any done at all) destroyed my confidence in the competence of the author and narrator to deliver on their promise.of aiding communication and understanding.
I received a free copy, and am leaving this review voluntarily.

Two books marred by bad editing.

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