Monday, October 18, 2010
Visit Open Access Week
AND don't forget to visit our information table on Thursday, October 21st, 1-2 p.m., Bldg. 3, room 505. If the weather's nice, we may opt for the covered entrance in front of Carr Auditorium. We'll have cookies, stickers, pens, t-shirt giveaways, and, oh yes, information on why you should consider publishing in Open Access journals or, at the very least, depositing your postprints in OA archives such as the UC eScholarship repository
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Podcast
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I just learned how to create podcasts using a few free online resources: Audacity, Freemusic, and Podbean.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Farmer's Markets at Hospitals
Thursday, September 2, 2010
PubMed...Half Full or Half Empty?
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Review of the iPad on Medical Rounds
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Assessing the Human Health Effects of the Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill: An Institute of Medicine Workshop - Institute of Medicine
Monday, August 9, 2010
Text-A-Librarian @ SFGH
Friday, July 23, 2010
Libraries Bigger than Cupcakes?
---Libraries give away things for free: unlike Netflix and Kindle who are friendly but want money for their stuff.
---Librarians are nerdy and actively uncool: they know things and are often openly feisty. They may be slightly subversive and don't follow the party line. Pop culture is now embracing such a perspective. Look at the picture of Linda on her blog and you'll see that Linda is a bit on the nerdy side herself, although certainly not actively uncool.
---Libraries are green and local: they reuse books, are anti-chain store, and are down home and folksy, which is all good per Linda.
---Libraries serve the public: Yes, the SFGH Barnett-Briggs Library is OPEN TO THE PUBLIC and open to all that that entails, including unpredictability. Sometimes the unpredictability creates drama resulting in calls for assistance from the Institutional Police. Thank you, Institutional Police.
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Research Raven Rocks
So I spent some time looking at ResearchRaven and was increasingly blown away by its utility, functionality, aesthetics, and overall coolness. Developed by librarian Hope Leman (I knew her father, Craig Leman, a surgeon) at Samaritan Health Services Center for Health Research and Quality, it's a free service that aims to provide researchers with up-to-the-minute publishing, meeting, and funding opportunities. Using RSS technology (Feedburner to be exact), it aggregates a variety of information sources in the medical and physical sciences into one well-designed user interface. Users can specifiy their area(s) of interest and be informed via RSS when new opportunities are announced.
As librarians know, this is the type of information that's difficult to ferret out, and if it's not current, it's not worth much, so having it combined in one place is real treasure. Not to mention the fact that it's free...or did I just mention that?
Thank you Hope. Well done!
Monday, April 19, 2010
Smartphones in Health Care
According to the report, a whopping 50% of iPhone apps for clinicians, medical students, and consumers are categorized as "Medical Reference" apps, and although the largest percentage of those are student study guides (19%), medical literature and drug reference apps together comprise the second largest percentage (13%).
Which brings me to the point of this post: Did you know that the SFGH library has a license to DynaMed, one of the highest-quality point-of-care medical/drug apps available today for physicians? It's relatively comprehensive (3,000 topics), has clearly designated levels of evidence, active links to cited articles, and great navigation for small-screen devices. Best of all, it's free to clinicians at SFGH. Take a look at the full version on the library's web site, and see if you'd like to install it on your phone or PDA. If so, email me (jgraham@sfghdean.ucsf.edu) and let me know what type of mobile device you have. I'll email you back a serial number and instructions for your specific device.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Print Textbooks: Going the Way of the Dodo?
- Some people want to read print books rather than electronic books. They find the paper, the smell, the browseability, something about the esthetics of print books appealing. Although I don't feel that way about textbooks or books I'm using for reference, I do feel that way about leisure reading books, and that gives me justification for purchasing medically-related non-fiction print books such as Atul Gawande's Checklist Manifesto, Paul Linde's Danger to Self, and Rebecca Skloot's Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks . These are books I want to read from cover-to-cover, maybe even curl up and get comfortable with.
- The second reason is regulatory in nature. The Joint Commission requires that hospital libraries provide access to current reference books in all medical specialty areas during times that computer networks and electrical systems are down. So this means you've gotta have... guess what? Yup, good old-fashioned astronomically-expensive print medical reference books AND a flashlight.
After explaining that to myself, I carried on with my book order.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Archives
Perhaps inspired by all the rebuild activity, a few of us have started talking about organizing some type of hospital archives. In offices and labs all over campus there are stashes of historic photos, art work, old lab notebooks, scrapbooks, and file folders containing newspaper clippings and other memorabilia that will be lost unless we take steps to collect and preserve them now.
Our unofficial archives committee is working on a plan to archive this material in some yet-to-be-determined format. Maybe it will be a presentation scrapbook to be used for fund raising, maybe it will be a digital archive accessible online for all to see. Maybe it will include materials we haven't yet identified as important, and maybe it will be organized in a way we haven't even thought of yet. It's definitely a work in progress, and will probably always will be...because that's the nature of an archive.