HEMOSTASIS is an introduction to hemostasis at about the 300 undergraduate level, for pre-med, pre-health students, or graduate students in ancillary subjects like biomedical engineering. It includes the bare bones of platelet function, blood coagulation, and fibrinolysis. A 100-level biochemistry background should be sufficient for this material. It is fairly old, but the basics are still correct.
COAGULATION is a fairly dense description of blood coagulation, and up-to-date. Written for medical students in the 1st or 2nd year, it could also be handled by upper level undergraduate students of biochemistry, pharmacology, etc. Except for the role of activated platelets in the clotting process, platelets are not covered in this material.
KINETICS is a nonstandard introduction to enzyme kinetics and other rate-controlled processes that are important in physiological systems. I taught it for some years to biochemistry graduate students. A biochemistry background is not needed, but 100-level chemistry experience is required--particularly concerning the laws of mass action and the basic thermodynamics of chemical reactions. The emphasis in this material is on the sort of problems and questions that (I think) typically occur in current research. In contrast, there is almost nothing here about the diagnosis of enzyme mechanisms from complex kinetic data, e.g. uni-uni vs bi-bi vs. ping-pong, etc. You won't get that here. But you will learn what the word affinity means!
BIOETHICS AND POLICY is an undergraduate course that I direct. It includes discussion of not only unplugging Granny, assisted suicide, etc, but also health insurance, informed consent (to both medical treatment and research), bioterror risks, fraud, the doctor's free lunch (conflict of interest), teaching evolution, and other interesting things. It changes quite a lot year by year. Some of the material for this course, including readings, is not public.