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DxHx.com is an English-language reference site centered on medical abbreviations and clinical documentation terminology, with a focus on explaining high-frequency concepts in medical study and clinical records such as Dx (Diagnosis), Hx (History), DDx, and SOAP notes. The site presents itself as a “Clinical Reference & Study Guide” and emphasizes quick-reference use for charting, SOAP notes, rounds, and boards.
The site offers 200+ medical abbreviations, organized into categories such as History, Diagnosis, Vitals & Exam, Labs & Imaging, Procedures, Medications, Cardiology, and Respiratory, along with a complete quick-reference table. It also explains the four parts of SOAP—Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan—as well as clinical documentation techniques such as OLDCARTS, dangerous abbreviations, Social Hx, and one-line summaries. In terms of format, it mainly consists of web text, tables, FAQs, and study tips, rather than video courses or a structured bootcamp.
The text clearly states “Free Always” and “no login, no clutter, always free,” so it can be considered a free tool. There is no information about subscriptions, individual course purchases, certificates, CME credits, or exam accreditation. The site also states that its content is for educational reference only and does not constitute medical advice.
Its strengths are its focused topic coverage and high search efficiency, making it useful for quickly understanding how medical abbreviations are used in SOAP notes, referral letters, discharge summaries, and rounds. It can also help medical students preparing for rotations, boards, or USMLE terminology review. Another highlight is its warning about JCAHO “do not use” abbreviation risks, showing a degree of safety awareness. The limitations are also clear: it is not a complete medical course and lacks a systematic learning path, case practice, quizzes, instructor feedback, and certificates. In addition, the site states that it is independently operated and not affiliated with a medical institution. Since medical content changes quickly, real clinical decisions must be checked against authoritative sources.
It is suitable for medical students, nursing or other healthcare students, those just starting clinical rotations, and healthcare professionals who need to quickly understand English medical record abbreviations. Patients and caregivers may also use it to understand parts of clinical documents, but they should not use it for self-diagnosis or treatment.
The crawled text does not provide information about access from mainland China, so this remains unknown. Since the content is in English, the main barrier for domestic users may be medical English and terminology background rather than course cost.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on dxhx.com official site.
dxhx.com is an United States Health provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach dxhx.com directly.