May’s Faculty Publications Display

The Isch?® Library features a display that highlights recent articles by LSUHSC-New Orleans faculty. This display, rotated out monthly, is being regularly updated with materials that have been gathered into the Faculty Publications Database. The Database is maintained by the Isch?® Library as a prominent resource.

The articles on display are located in the Isch?® Library’s Reference area (near the elevator) on the third floor of the Resource Center Building.

About the Isch?® Library’s Faculty Publications Database:

The Faculty Publications Database includes citations to papers, editorials, letters to the editor, meeting abstracts, books, and book chapters authored by at least one member of the LSUHSC-New Orleans faculty, 1998 ÔÇô present. Information in this database is retrieved from several sources, including: PubMed, ISI Web of Knowledge, SCOPUS, EMBASE.com, CINAHL, PsycInfo and contributions directly from faculty members.

Access to this database is available to the public. To add your faculty publications, or for questions about this database, contact Kathy Kerdolff.

Please come and peruse these publications, which exemplify the ongoing achievements of LSUHSC-New Orleans’ first-class work in the health sciences fields.

Articles Newly Placed on Display:

1. James M Barbeau: “Damage control resuscitation: From emergency department to the operating room.” The American Surgeon. Volume 77, February 2011, p201-206.

2. Matthew A Bowen, Marcie Tauzin, and Evelyn A Kluka: “Diagnostic and interventional sialendoscopy: A preliminary experience.” Laryngoscope. Vol 121, February 2011, p299-303.

3. Lisa M Harrison-Bernard: “Glomerular filtration rate determinations in conscious type II diabetic mice.” American Journal of Physiology – Renal Physiology. Volume 300, March 2011, pF618-25.

4. David H Martin, Rebecca A Clark, and Mary Murphy: “The influence of bacterial vaginosis on the response to trichomonas vaginalis treatment among HIV-infected women.” Sexually Transmitted Infections. Volume 87, 2011, p205-8.

5. Rose M Schaubhut and Judith A Gentry: “Nursing preceptor workshops: Partnership and collaboration between academia and practice.” Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing. Volume 41, No 4, 2010, p155-162.

6. Jean Valliere: “Innovations to Improve Services for Women with Perinatal Depression” Nursing for Women’s Health, Volume 15, no 2, 2011, p126-136.

7. Wayne V Vedeckis: “A new, lineage specific, autoup-regulation mechanism for human glucocorticoid receptor gene expression in 697 pre-b-acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells.” Molecular Endocrinology. Volume 25, no 1, January 2011, p44-57.

8. Diane S Wilensky: “Multi-site diagnosis and management of 260 patients with auditory neuropathy/dys-synchrony (auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder.” International Journal of Audiology. Volume 49, no 1, 2010, p30-43.

School of Dentistry in La. Life

“‘Chew’sing An Education: LSU’s Dental School Makes Its Mark” appears in the May-June 2011 issue of Louisiana Life. The article, which includes remarks from two fourth-year students, a faculty member, and Dean Gremillion, emphasizes the family-like atmosphere, state-of-the-art technology, and expertise of the faculty. Read the article at http://www.myneworleans.com/Louisiana-Life/May-June-2011/-ldquoChew-rdquosing-An-Education/.

Natural Standard on Dr. Oz Show

On Tuesday, April 26th, Dr. Catherine Ulbricht, co-founder of Natural Standard, will appear as an authoritative guest on the nationally syndicated television program, The Dr. Oz Show. Dr. Mehmet Oz will discuss Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) and the stigmas that have long been associated with this specialty. Dr. Ulbricht is Chief Editor of both the Natural Standard Research Collaboration and Journal of Dietary Supplements, and she is the Senior Attending Pharmacist at Massachusetts General Hospital. She founded Natural Standard Research Collaboration with Dr. Ethan Basch in 2000 to provide authoritative, evidence-based information on natural products used in healthcare. The show will be aired in New Orleans on WDSU Channel 6 at 2:00 p.m.

The Library has subscribed to Natural Standard since 2007. The database provides high quality, evidence-based CAM information organized by topics such as Foods, Herbs & Supplements, Health & Wellness, and Medical Conditions. Therapies are reviewed and graded using a systematic aggregation, analysis, and review of the literature. Access is available on and off campus: http://www.lsuhsc.edu/no/library/ss&d/data/natstan.html. A mobile download is available also.

RefWorks 2.0

RefWorks your web-based reference manager is getting a new look. If you have already created Refworks personal databases, please convert to the RefWorks 2.0 as soon as possible and take advantage of the cleaner, more intuitive interface. Not familiar with Refworks? Create a new log-in (free) and begin managing your references with RefWorks 2.0.

RefWorks 2.0 allows you to manage your references anywhere you have access to the Internet!
You can:
ÔÇó Search PubMed (within RefWorks)
ÔÇó Directly import your selected PubMed citations
ÔÇó Store your references in folders (including attaching the full-text of the article)
ÔÇó Share your references with your collaborators
ÔÇó Add your references as you type a paper (write-n-cite)
ÔÇó Create and format bibliographies in the citation style you need

Try the RefWorks 2.0 tutorial to get a glimpse of what you can do to get organized.
For more information about RefWorks 2.0 and other super cool ways to gather your references including searching SCOPUS and directly exporting citations to your RefWorks account contact Kathy Kerdolff.

To switch between old and new versions, simply use the links at the top right of the screen. RefWorks 1.0 will be available through December 2011.

Old RefWorks Design

Old RefWorks Design


New RefWorks Design

New RefWorks Design

Old Dissection Room Photos

The American Medical Association‘s news section (amednews.com) has released a slide show of historic (and contemporary) photos which illustrate the changing attitude to cadaver study in anatomy labs.

I must admit, I would have been creeped out to receive the Christmas card (slide 4) from the cadaver lab.

Easter Hours

The Isch?® Library will have special hours in observence of the Easter Holiday. They are as follows:

Thursday, April 21st 8 am to 8 pm
Friday, April 22nd CLOSED (University Holiday)
Saturday, April 23rd CLOSED
Sunday, April 24th CLOSED

Monday, April 25th 8 am to 10 pm Regular Hours

The LSUHSC Dental Library will also close Friday, April 22nd through Sunday, April 23rd. Click here to view their regular and holiday hours.

Happy Easter!

3rd Floor Printer

*Update*4p.m. The printer has been restored. Thanks for your patience.

We are experiencing technical difficulties with the printer on the main floor of the Isch?® Library. The problem has been reported and will hopefully be resolved in the near future.

Until then, please send all print jobs to the 4th Floor printer. You can designate color or black and white copies within the printer preferences before sending your print job.

We apologize for the inconvenience.

Finding Full-Text Articles

Front of Brochure

Front of Brochure

Ever found a citation you could really use for a research paper but couldnÔÇÖt quite figure out how to find the full-text version?

In order to help you through this somewhat tricky process we have created a short and simple brochure available in print and online.

Pick up a copy at the Isch?® Library or find it here on the Library Homepage.

Enjoy!

Space Medicine

From the Civil War to the first manned space flight, April 12th is a busy day. firstmaninspace11-sr

LSUHSC Libraries owns a few books on the medical implications of space flight. All are cataloged under the subjects Space Flight or Aerospace Medicine. All the books in our collection are between 50 and 20 years old, as this isn’t a popular area for monographs.

My personal favorite:
America’s astronauts and their indestructible spirit by Fred Kelly with a foreward by Buzz Aldrin. Published 1986, the author was a former NASA physician and a 1951 alum of the LSU Medical School.

Civil War Medicine

Today is the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the American Civil War. The war is significant to the history of medicine because of the advances made in medicine during the conflict.

Also of significance are the institutions which were founded in the Civil War’s aftermath: the National Institutes of Health, the National Library of Medicine, and the Index Catalogue of the Surgeon-General’s Office, the pre-cursor to the modern MEDLINE.

The National Library of Medicine offers a couple of Civil War exhibits:
Life and Limb: The Toll of the American Civil War (2011)
Binding Wounds, Pushing Boundaries: African Americans in Civil War Medicine (2010)

Rehabilitation Reference Center

Rehabilitation Reference Center is a wide-ranging collection of evidence-based rehabilitation resources for rehabilitation clinicians, physical therapists and occupational therapists to personalize and print at the point-of-care.

Users can locate information by doing a simply keyword search or by browsing through pre-determined topics such as ÔÇ£Diseases & Conditions,ÔÇØ ÔÇ£Drug Information,ÔÇØ ÔÇ£Patient Education,ÔÇØ ÔÇ£Exercise ImagesÔÇØ and ÔÇ£Practice Resources.ÔÇØ Users will also find Key Features and up-to-date Health News from on the homepage.

LSUHSC faculty, staff and students can access RCC off campus with use of a valid LSUHSC library barcode & PIN. You can find a link to this resource from the LibraryÔÇÖs Online Resource page.

April’s Faculty Publications Display

Last month, the Isch?® Library initiated a new display that highlights recent articles by LSUHSC-New Orleans faculty. This display is being regularly updated with materials that have been gathered into the Faculty Publications Database, which is maintained by the Isch?® Library as a prominent resource.

The articles on display, rotated out monthly, are in the Isch?® LibraryÔÇÖs Reference area (near the elevator) on the third floor of the Resource Center Building.

About the Isch?® LibraryÔÇÖs Faculty Publications Database:

The Faculty Publications Database includes citations to papers, editorials, letters to the editor, meeting abstracts, books, and book chapters authored by at least one member of the LSUHSC-New Orleans faculty, 1998 ÔÇô present. Information in this database is retrieved from several sources, including: PubMed, ISI Web of Knowledge, SCOPUS, EMBASE.com, CINAHL, PsycInfo and contributions directly from faculty members.

Access to this database is available to the public. To add your faculty publications, or for questions about this database, contact Kathy Kerdolff: kkerdo@lsuhsc.edu

The database is linked from the Library web page here. This page includes a handy link to a PDF document of the monthly bibliography of display articles.

At our Dental Library:

In addition, the Dental Library has also started a faculty publications display. Their articles are located in front of the circulation desk and are also rotated monthly.

Please come and peruse these publications, which exemplify the ongoing achievements of LSUHSC-New OrleansÔÇÖ first-class work in the health sciences fields.

Diagnosaurus Rawr!

dx_icon   Diagnosaurus is a popular differential diagnostic tool with a catchy name. LSUHSC users have multiple access points to search its content:
  • If you are On Campus then simply go to AccessMedicine and then click on DDX in the menu bar.
  • If you are Off Campus then go to the link from the Library’s webpage and enter your off-campus information. Again, follow the DDX link.
  • If you are on a Handheld/Mobile Device with Web Access, then create a my AccessMedicine account while on the AccessMedicine page from a non-mobile device. Go to AccessMedicine on your mobile web browser and login. Diagnosaurus is in the list of choices.
  • If you are on a Handheld/Mobile Device with Web Access and want an App Download, go to the UnboundMedicine website. Downloads are free for Palm, Windows Mobile, and Blackberry and are 99¢ for iOS (iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad), Android, and Windows Phone 7. An internet connection is still necessary to access the data.
  • R. A. D. Systems

    A free self-defense course is being offered to LSUHSC female students, faculty, staff and family by nationally certified Rape Aggression Defense instructors. ?áThe R.A.D. System hopes to increases awareness and prevention.

    Several classes are available:

    When: April 6th ÔÇô 8th (5pm ÔÇô 8pm each night)

    Where: Medical Education Bldg ÔÇô 1901 Perdido St ÔÇô 3rd Floor in Seminar Rm 8

    To REGISTER call (504)858-5596

    OR

    E-mail: Cpl. Rhonda Binder rbinde@lsuhsc.edu or Sgt. Robert Hall rhall1@lsuhsc.edu.

    County Health Rankings Update!

    The County Health Rankings ÔÇö are a key component of the Mobilizing Action Toward Community Health (MATCH) project. MATCH is a collaboration between the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute.
    take_action_button
    The 50 state reports help public health and community leaders, policy-makers, consumers and others to see how healthy their county is, compare it with others within their state and find ways to improve the health of their community.

    A snap shot of New Orleans report is available: http://www.countyhealthrankings.org/louisiana/orleans