Off Campus Access
Just a quick reminder that most LSUHSC-New Orleans resources are available off campus (any where not on the LSUHSC network). This includes full-text materials, books & journals. Check out our handy tutorial.
Just a quick reminder that most LSUHSC-New Orleans resources are available off campus (any where not on the LSUHSC network). This includes full-text materials, books & journals. Check out our handy tutorial.
The Library of Congress had created a history of presidential inaugurations page.
To watch today’s inauguration on campus, there are two choices:
“The broadcast will be shown in the Medical Education Building, Lecture Room A, from 11:00 AM until 1:00 PM. Classes will end at 10:45 AM. Due to the continuing construction on the 2nd floor of the MEB, please use the 1st floor to enter and leave the Lecture Room.
In addition to the Lecture Room, for those wishing to view the coverage from their computer, the broadcast will be available from our web servers at http://webdev2.lsuhsc.edu/inauguration/ To view the broadcast, click on the preceding link using Internet Explorer on a computer with a wired connection. The broadcast will be available at the Schools of Dentistry and Public Health and all buildings on the downtown campus. The broadcast will not be available at the LSU Interim Hospital or via Citrix, VPN or wireless connections.” from an email from the Chancellor.
For new students or ones that haven’t been to the Isché Library in awhile, the construction zone will be the new Library Commons. This space when completed will feature study tables, video rooms, a coffee shop, exhibit space, and 24/7 access. Work began in May 2008 and should be completed in Spring 2009.
Check out the LSUHSC ?óÔé¼ÔÇ£ New Orleans Faculty Publications database for your 2008 publications to make sure yours are included. I check Biological Abstracts, CINAHL, Web of Science, PubMed, SCOPUS, and EMBASE.com for publications from LSUHSC ?óÔé¼ÔÇ£ NO. Books, book chapters, and local and regional conference abstracts are not indexed in these resources and may have been overlooked.
If your 2008 publication is not there, please submit citation information to Kathy Kerdolff, Reference Librarian (kkerdo@lsuhsc.edu).
The Isché & Dental Libraries will be open regular hours on Sunday, January 18th. But will be closed on Monday, January 19th in observance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, a university holiday.
Ever wonder why you always get sick at Mardi Gras? Surely it couldn’t be the mass consumption of food and drink combined with the scrambling around outside in all types of weather. Overindulgence aside, the “Mardi Gras malaise” sprang to my mind when I ran across “Public Health Surveillance for Mass Gatherings” (full text PDF) from the Johns Hopkins APL Technical Digest (Lombardo, J.S., et al.; Vol. 27, No. 4 (2008):
Abstract:
Mass gatherings represent specific challenges for public health officials because of the health risks associated with crowd size and duration of stay. In addition, population movement requires public health departments to interact across jurisdictional boundaries to identify risks and disease-management solutions. However, federal privacy laws restrict the sharing of patient data among public health departments in multiple jurisdictions. This article examines previous disease surveillance practices by public health officials in planning for mass events
and describes a simple approach for sharing health-risk information that was employed in 2007 during Super Bowl XLI by the health departments of Indiana, Marion County, Cook County, and Miami-Dade County.
Want more? In honor of the Inauguration, Superbowl, and other large spectacles, the National Library of Medicine has put together a fresh new bibliography on Public Health Preparations for Mass Gatherings.
A collection of hot new Library acquisitions are displayed on the New Books Shelf on the third floor (near the Reference Stacks). These titles can be checked out!
Ball, Jane. Pediatric Nursing: caring for children. WY 159 B21p 2008
Fortinash, Katherine M. Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing. WY 160 F77ps 2008
Catalano, Joseph T. Nursing Now!: today’s issues, tomorrow’s trends. WY 16 C28c 2009
American College of Cardiology Foundation, American Nurses Association. Cardiovascular Nursing: scope and standards of practice. WY 16 C17 2008
Styles, Margretta Madden. Specialization and Credentialing in Nursing Revisited: understanding the issues, advancing the profession. WY 101 St9s 2008
Winner, Paul. Headache in Children and Young Adults. 2nd ed. WL342 W73 2008
Cranford, Jerry. The Healthcare Professional’s Guide to Human Research. W 20.5 C85 2008
Clouse, Amy L. Women’s Health in Clinical Practice: handbook for primary care. WA 309 C625 2008
Li, Shulin. Electroporation Protocols: preclinical and clinical gene medicine. QZ 52 L61 2008
Brown, Meta. Drug Calculations: process and problems for clinical practice. 8th ed. QV 18 B81 2008
Holmboe, Eric S. Practical Guide to the Evaluation of Clinical Competence. W 20 H73 2008
Verster, Joris C. Sleep and Quality of Life in Clinical Medicine. WL 108 V61 2008
Hudziak, James J. Developmental Psychopathology and Wellness: genetic and environmental influences. WS 350 H86 2008
Jones, Stephen J. Prostate Biopsy: indications, techniques, and complications. WJ 750 J71 2008
Kiesslich, Ralf. Atlas of Endomicroscopy. WI 17 K54 2008
Rutter, Michael. Genetic Effects on Environmental Vulnerability to Disease. WA 30.5 R93 2008
McCracken, Thomas. Color Atlas of Small Animal Anatomy: the essentials. SF 761 M13 2008
Fishman, Alfred P. Fishman’s Pulmonary Diseases and Disorders. 4th ed. WF 600 F53pu 2008
Oatis, Carol A. Kinesiology: the mechanics and pathomechanics of human movement. 2nd ed. WE 103 Oa8k 2009
The American Society for Cell Biology’s Image and Video Library is a great collection of still images and dynamic videos of the highest quality covering the field of cell biology. CellDance is an annual contest hosted by the ASCB that spotlights new video and digital images in microscopy.
My favorite is this video from University of California, San Francisco, which uses synchronized swimmers to illustrate mitosis. (The first place winner on the Golgi Appartus is pretty cool as well.)
The ASCB’s Image & video library invites contributions from all cell biologists who wish to publish high quality images and videos on the site, and all content is available to view for free online. As of yet there are no submissions from LSU! Maybe you could be the first to contribute.
The John P. Isché Library will start opening at 12 noon on Sundays starting, January 11th. The Library will continue to close at 12 midnight.
UK researchers say the video game Tetris may work to reduce Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, BBC news reports:
The Oxford University experiment works on the principle that it may be possible to modify the way in which the brain forms memories in the hours after an event.
A total of 40 healthy volunteers were enrolled, and shown a film which included traumatic images of injuries.
Half of the group were then given the game to play while the other half did nothing.
The number of “flashbacks” experienced by each group was then reported and recorded over the next week, and those who played Tetris had significantly fewer.
The study was recently published in the online, open access journal PLoS One.
From protecting our genetic information from discrimination to constructing an entire bacterial genome from scratch, here’s a round-up of the top stories in science and medicine for 2008:
Science Magazine names Reprogramming Cells the “Breakthrough of the year”; exoplanets & cancer genes make runners-up.
The NIH open access policy and GINA get a mention in Rick Weiss’s Top 8 Science Policy News Stories of 2008 at ScienceProgress.org.
Time Magazine went whole hog with it’s Top 10 of Everything, but we’re more interested in their Top 10 Medical Breakthroughs and Top 10 Scientific Discoveries.
Amazon editors selected Your Inner Fish: A Journey into the 3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body by Neil Shubin the best science book of 2008. Customers used their wallets to push My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist’s Personal Journey by Jill Bolte Taylor above Shubin; Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach sounds pretty interesting as well. (2008 was also the year of the colon, apparently.)
For you skeptics out there, The Quakometer offers his take on the best books about quackery, scepticism, complementary and alternative medicine and its effects on society for 2008.
Whether it’s your first H&P or fifty-thousandth, medical students and other health care professionals will find A Practical Guide to Clinical Medicine useful.
Created by Charlie Goldberg, M.D. and Jan Thompson at UCSD School of Medicine, A Practical Guide to Clinical Medicine is designed eye towards clinical relevance. Each section is constructed to answer the question: “What do I really need to know about this area of medical care?” and the material is presented in a concise, ordered fashion with color photographs that should be readily applicable to the common clinical scenarios seen in day to day practice.
Detailed descriptions of how to function in clinical settings are included. If you’ve ever wondered about oral presentations, patient write-ups, outpatient clinics, functioning on an inpatient service or clinical decision making, there are sections describing exactly that.
A Practical Guide to Clinical Medicine is freely available online for anyone.
Everyone knows to watch out for small children and choking hazards, especially when age recommendations are not followed. As tomorrow (January 6th) is the first day of carnival, it is also the first day of the official King Cake season. Make sure you don’t choke on any plastic babies.
The Isché Library elevator will be out of service for the forseeable future. It is being upgraded along with the main elevators for the building. It was taken out of service on December 23rd.
The LSUHSC Libraries (Dental and Isché) are closed for the Winter Break (university holidays). Both Libraries will re-open on January 2nd at 8 a.m.