New displays on tap for Dental Library

Those of you have visited the Dental Library in the past month may have been met with the sounds of hammers, drills, and paintbrushes coming from behind plastic sheeting. Now you can see what the cacophony was all about: a gorgeous set of lighted glass display cases.

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They remain empty, but soon we will be moving many of the items currently displayed in the wooden cases to the right of the library doors in their new home. That area, then, will house much of our rare and old books collection.

Introducing VisualDx: A New Tool for Clinicians

Thanks to the School of Medicine Office of Student Technology, LSUHSC now has access to a new web-based clinical application designed to aid in visual diagnosis and patient education.

VisualDx?á allows point-of-care assistance for the user. The differential builder, diagnosis search, and medication search provide the information necessary to compare symptoms, visual cues, diagnosis, and treatment options. The VisualDx image bank contains over 25,000 medical images of diseases of the skin, hair, nails, eyes, lungs, etc. and shows variations by age, skin type, and stage.

You can watch a video overview of the application here:?áhttp://www.visualdx.com/features/video-overview.

Access to VisualDx is currently available through August 2014 for use on campus as well as off-campus for those with remote access privileges.?áSupported browsers are Internet Explorer 7+, Google Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. VisualDx also supports mobile wireless devices with a 3G or 4G connection.

A Wintry Mix of Published Research

Eight recent articles by LSUHSC-NO researchers are now on display in the Library for November and December. Along with OctoberÔÇÖs picks, they can be viewed in the Reference area (near the Library elevator), on the third floor of the Resource Center Building. These items are also part of the LibraryÔÇÖs Faculty Publications Database.

The Faculty Publications Database includes publications authored by at least one member of the LSUHSC-New Orleans faculty, 1998 ÔÇô present. Access to this database is available to the public.

The database is linked from the Library web page here. This page includes a handy link to a PDF of the monthly bibliography of display articles. To add your faculty publications, or for questions about this database, contact Kathy Kerdolff.

LSUHSC-NO authors are shown in bold print:

  1. Amoss J. ÔÇ£Attending rounds: Where do we go from here?: Comment on ÔÇÿattending rounds in the current eraÔÇÖ.ÔÇØ JAMA Internal Medicine. 2013; 173(12):1089-1090.
  2. Dimitriades V, Gedalia A. ÔÇ£Interstitial lung disease as an unusual presenting symptom in juvenile dermatomyositis.ÔÇØ Clinical Pediatrics. 2013; 52(4):367-369.
  3. Hsieh MC, Wu XC, Andrews PA, Chen VW. ÔÇ£Racial and ethnic disparities in the incidence and trends of soft tissue sarcoma among adolescents and young adults in the United States, 1995-2008.ÔÇØ Journal of Adolescent & Young Adult Oncology. 2013; 2(3):89-94.
  4. Jeyakumar A, Wilson M, Sorrel JE, McIntire JB, Jones DD, Brickman TM, Arriaga M. ÔÇ£Monopolar cautery and adverse effects on cochlear implants.ÔÇØ JAMA Otolaryngology- Head & Neck Surgery. 2013; 139(7):694-697.
  5. LeBlanc KE, LeBlanc LL, LeBlanc KA. ÔÇ£Inguinal hernias: Diagnosis and management.ÔÇØ American Family Physician. 2013; 87(12):844-848.
  6. Pellett AA, Myers L, Welsch M, Jazwinski SM, Welsh DA. ÔÇ£Left atrial enlargement and reduced physical function during aging.ÔÇØ Journal of Aging & Physical Activity. 2013; 21(4):417-432.
  7. Struckhoff AP, Rana MK, Kher SS, Burow ME, Hagan JL, Del Valle L, Worthylake RA. ÔÇ£PDZ-RhoGEF is essential for CXCR4-driven breast tumor cell motility through spatial regulation of RhoA.ÔÇØ Journal of Cell Science. 2013; 126(19):4514-4526.
  8. Trahan J, Serban D, Tender GC. ÔÇ£Gunshot wounds to the spine in Post-Katrina New Orleans.ÔÇØ Injury-International Journal of the Care of the Injured. 2013; 44(11):1601-1606.

Happy Veterans Day

The Libraries are open regular hours today, but would like to take a moment and thank all of our veterans as well as those currently serving.

If you haven’t seen it elsewhere, meet the oldest known living veteran, 107 year old Richard Overton of Texas who will be honored at the White House today. I don’t know that his recommendations of whiskey in your coffee and cigars would really work for all of us.

7th Annual Health and Wellness Event 11/6

Today,?áWednesday November 6th,?áis officially the 7th Annual Health and Wellness Event!?á

From: 10:00 am – 2:00 pm

Location: 3rd floor of the Medical Education Building (across from the cafeteria)

 

 

It’s AcWriMo 2013!

Inspired by the hugely successful NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month), PhD2Published, a blog dedicated to helping academics publish, has announced that November is also AcWriMo (Academic Writing Month).

AcWriMo is a month long academic write-a-thon for academics at all stages of their careers. ?áPhD2Published will support writers with dedicated posts about academic writing and thousands of Tweets to encourage you to keep going throughout the month.

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According to their website:

“There are 6 basic rules:

1. Decide on your goal. You might count words, hours put in or projects achieved ÔÇô itÔÇÖs up to you. But try and push yourself a bit. (And if you need help counting our?áPhDometer app?áÔÇô the proceeds from which help fund this month-long writing extravaganza ÔÇô was designed for just that!)

2. Declare it! Basically, just sign up on the?áAcWriMo 2013 Writing Accountability Spreadsheet?áand fill in the sections on what youÔÇÖd like to achieve by the end of the month. Being accountable is key to this working for you. You need to feel a bit of pressure to get the work done. So sign up and add your goals as soon as you can.

3. Draft a strategy. DonÔÇÖt start AcWriMo without doing a bit of planning and preparation. Get some reading done, carve out time slots in your schedule to dedicate to writing, even buy your favorite coffee. Sort out whatever youÔÇÖll need to write, and get it done now, there wonÔÇÖt be time when November comes around.

4. Discuss your progress. OK so being on Twitter and Facebook with us all day isn’t acceptable ÔÇô you’ve got work to do ÔÇô but checking-in at certain times is really important! We want to know how youÔÇÖre getting on? What is working for you and what isn’t? Do you need help? Do you want to share a writing triumph? (YouÔÇÖll find most discussion about AcWriMo on Twitter using the?á#AcWriMo?áhashtag, but if?áFacebook?áis more your thing, go there. Or use your own blog to keep in touch. You can even write little updates you want to share in the?áspreadsheet.)

5. DonÔÇÖt slack off. As participant Bettina said of the first AcWriMo, you must ÔÇÿwrite like thereÔÇÖs no December!ÔÇÖ If you push yourself, youÔÇÖll quickly discover the tips and techniques that work best for YOU and thatÔÇÖll save you even more time in the long-run.

6. Declare your results. ItÔÇÖs great to use the spreadsheet everyday (or as often as you can) to chart how youÔÇÖre getting on, but even if you canÔÇÖt do that, you MUST announce your results at the end of the month. Our writing community benefits not only from sharing in your achievements, but knowing what didn’t work and being reminded that, at the end of the day, weÔÇÖre all human!”

So everyone should go forth and WRITE… That’s what I’ll be doing this month!

Scanning on 3rd Floor Copier at Ische

The Isch?® Library’s new 3rd floor copier has a feature that allows you to scan to a flash drive or an sd memory card; the instructions for using this service are posted on the machine and it is free.

Testing, Testing: PubMed Commons Community Forum

PubMed Commons, a new forum community created for online collaboration for ÔÇ£constructive criticism and discussion of scientific issues,ÔÇØ has introduced a pilot version.

During its closed pilot phase, PubMed Commons will be allowing accounts using approved email addresses from PubMed authors to participate. ?áNIH or Wellcome Trust grant recipients can also join and invite others to join. You can test whether you have access here http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedcommons/join/. Users will also need a My NCBI account.

Find answers to frequently asked questions on this page: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedcommons/faq/.

More Street Closures this Friday (Oct. 18th)

From Facilities Services:

Friday morning, October 18, from 7:00 am through 2:00 pm, South Roman Street will be closed at Gravier Street.?á Access to and from the Roman St. Garage will only be available from Tulane Avenue.?á No one will be able to enter the intersection of South Roman Street and Gravier Street during this closure.?á The street is being closed by the Sewerage & Water Board to facilitate paving in the intersection.

Library Photocopiers – PayPaw Only

The photocopiers in the Isch?® and Dental Libraries can no longer accept cash. They will only work with PayPaw from now on.?á This change was authorized by the managing department, Auxiliary Enterprises.

Street Closures This Weekend

 

Here are this weekend’s street closures as reported by Associate Vice Chancellor John Ball:

“From Friday morning, October 11, at 7:00 am through Monday evening, October 14, South Roman Street will be closed at Gravier Street.?á Access to and from the Roman St. Garage will only be available from Tulane Avenue.?á No one will be able to enter the intersection of South Roman Street and Gravier Street during this closure.?á The street is being closed by the Sewerage & Water Board to facilitate sewer repairs and paving in the intersection.

Thank you for your patience.”

New Issue of the Library Bulletin

The latest issue of the LibraryÔÇÖs Newsletter has been released. Archives of the newsletter are also available from 1998 to the present.

Upcoming “Introduction to RefWorks” Class

Are you searching for a better way to manage your resources and have no idea where to start? We have the solution for you!

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Next Wednesday, October 16th, from noon to 1pm, the Isch?® Library will be offering an introductory Refworks class. Refworks, a web-based bibliography and citation manager supported by the Library, is a useful tool for organizing your online references. If you’d like to familiarize yourself with Refworks before attending the class, please visit :?áhttp://www.lsuhsc.edu/no/library/services/refworks.html.
The class will be held in the Library’s computer classroom on the 4th floor of the Resource Center Building on October 16th from noon to 1pm.
Anyone associated with the LSU Health Sciences Center and interested in getting started with RefWorks should definitely plan to attend.
Please contact the instructor, Head Dental Librarian Julie Schiavo, via email at jschia@lsuhsc.edu or by phone at 504-941-8162.

October’s LSUHSC-NO Research Highlights

There is a new offering of eight recent articles by LSUHSC-NO researchers to be spotlighted by the Library in October. These are currently on display in the Reference area (near the Library elevator), on the third floor of the Resource Center Building. These items are also part of the LibraryÔÇÖs Faculty Publications Database.

The Faculty Publications Database includes publications authored by at least one member of the LSUHSC-New Orleans faculty, 1998 ÔÇô present. Access to this database is available to the public.

The database is linked from the Library web page here. This page includes a handy link to a PDF of the monthly bibliography of display articles. To add your faculty publications, or for questions about this database, contact Kathy Kerdolff.

LSUHSC-NO authors are shown in bold print:

  1. Garbee DD, Paige J, Barrier K, Kozmenko V, Kozmenko L, Zamjahn J, Bonanno L, Cefalu J. “Interprofessional teamwork among students in simulated codes: a quasi-experimental study.” Nursing Education Perspectives. 2013; 34(5):339-344.
  2. Harch P. “Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for post-concussion syndrome: contradictory conclusions from a study mischaracterized as sham-controlled.” Journal of Neurotrauma. 2013; epub ahead of print.
  3. Johnston DA, Yano J, Fidel PL, Eberle KE, Palmer GE. “Engineering candida albicans to secrete a host immunomodulatory factor.” FEMS Microbiology Letters. 2013; 346(2):131-139.
  4. Buccola NG, with the Cross-Disorder Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium. ÔÇ£Genetic relationship between five psychiatric disorders estimated from genome-wide SNPs.” Nature Genetics. 2013; 45(9):984-994.
  5. McGoey RR, Cheek B, Jain N, Newman WP. “Acute onset of extreme shortness of breath.” Journal of the Louisiana State Medical Society. 2013; 165(3):175-177.
  6. Ruiz M, Armstrong M, Ogboukiri T, Anwar D. “Patterns of pain medication use during last months of life in HIV-infected populations: the experience of an academic outpatient clinic.” American Journal Hospice & Palliative Medicine. 2013; epub ahead of print.
  7. Walvekar S, Johnson JL, Jetly R, Kauffman E, deBoisblanc BP. “Clinical Case of the Month: A 52-Year-Old Man With Ecchymotic Leg Ulcers.” Journal of The Louisiana State Medical Society. 2013; 165(3): 232-234.
  8. Wilk A, Waligorski P, Lassak A, Vashistha H, Lirette D, Tate D, Zea AH, Koochekpour S, Rodriguez P, Meggs LG, Estrada JJ, Ochoa A, Reiss K. “Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons – induced ROS accumulation enhances mutagenic potential of T-antigen from human polyomavirus JC.” Journal of Cellular Physiology. 2013; 228(11): 2127-2138.