| These links have a variety of photos,
radiographs and other medical images in electronic format. The
images are free, some sites require registration. Some of the
sites allow users to contribute their images to the collection.
Note: Be sure to read usage/copyright guidelines for
each of these resources.
AnatQuest -
The National Library of Medicine's Visible Human Project has produced
high resolution (4096 x 2048 x 24 bits) cryosectional color images of
human anatomy.
Bristol Biomedical
Images Archive - From the United Kingdom, a collection of dental,
medical, and veterinary images. Registration is required.
Knowledge Weavers
- Contains image banks/collections of Atlas of the Brain,
Dermatology, Animated Heart and the ECG Learning Center. All from
the University of Utah.
HEAL
- Health Education Assets Library. HEAL's primary mission is to provide
educators with high-quality and free multimedia materials (such as
images and videos) to augment health science education. Registration is
required.
Images from the
History of Medicine - The National Library of Medicine's site that
offers nearly 60,000 images in the prints and photograph collection of
the History of Medicine Division (HMD) of the U.S. The collection
includes portraits, pictures of institutions, caricatures, genre
scenes, and graphic art in a variety of media, illustrating the social
and historical aspects of medicine.
images.MD - Has over
45,000 medical images from more than 80 collections and 2,000
contributors. Registration required.
NetAnatomy -
Designed to teach human anatomy to students of the health professions,
including undergraduate, medical, allied health, and nursing students.
NetAnatomy will also serve as a place to review anatomy after one's
initial exposure to the subject.
Public
Health Image Library PHILTM - The content is organized
into hierarchical categories of people, places, and science, and is
presented as single images, image sets, and multimedia files. Free site
from the Center of Disease Control.
The
Visible Human Project - The creation of complete, anatomically
detailed, three-dimensional representations of the normal male and
female human bodies. Free from the National Library of Medicine
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