South Campus Library Construction Update

6/13/2023 UPDATE

Please be aware of construction and likely disruptions in the library July 15th-16th. They will be working behind a barrier to install the glass wall and doors between the library and the School of Public Health. Please be aware and make alternate study arrangements, if necessary.

4/17/2023 UPDATE

The demolition and reconstruction of the central stairwell in the library space will be taking place after the last week of final exams. Starting around 3pm on Friday, April 28th and extending through the end of the day on Monday, May 1st.  Office of Medical Education confirmed that no classes or exams will taking place from 4/28/23 to 5/5/23. 

3/2/2023 UPDATE

Crews will be working in the back hall, room 300 and in group study rooms BG4, BG5, BG6 that are hall (next to the vending machines) adjacent this weekend. They will be doing duct work and some finishing. These rooms will be unavailable from Friday evening to Sunday evening. 

2/15/2023 UPDATE

There will be disruptive duct work and finishing construction in the back hall, room 300 and in group study rooms BG4, BG5, & BG6 (next to the vending machines) this weekend. These rooms will be unavailable from Friday evening (2/17) to Monday morning (2/20).

Please post an update on the library site about the closure and the increased noise.   I have reserved them on the site so that they are offline and put signs up tomorrow. Just to be safe, they will be unavailable until Monday at 7am. 

12/29/2022 UPDATE

There will be disruptive construction in the E2 library entrance area on the weekend of January 6th. While the installation of the temporary doors took place around 2 weeks ago, they are not yet working.  The relocation of the door openers and closing of the current main entrance to the Library space will take place the weekend of 1/6/23.  After that, the recently installed temporary doors will serve as the primary entrance to the Library and the Office of Medical Education, as well as the stairwell to the Team-Based Learning.  At that time, the new vinyl construction barrier will go up between the current entry area and the Library space, making the current main entrance defunct.

12/7/2022 UPDATE

Group study rooms BG4, BG5 and BG6 will be closed over the weekend from 5PM on Friday December 9th until Monday December 12th at 8AM.  There will be disruptive demolition and construction in the E2 library entrance area on Saturday, December 10th.

12/5/2022 UPDATE

The contractors have now constructed the temporary and some of the permanent walls in the E2 space to separate the construction zone from the library space and the Office of Medical Education.  See the pictures below of the walls that were constructed this weekend.  They will be taking down all the vents/ductwork in the SOPH space on the other side of the walls, so there is a potential for noise this week.  There is a distinct lack of light in the stairwell entry now and Library Administration will be emailing our contractor and facilities/design about it.  Hopefully, they will have a solution.

11/30/2022 UPDATE

There will be loud/possibly disruptive construction taking place in the library space every Saturday for at least the next month.

Construction taking place on 12/3/22 will be the walls in front of the stairwell to the door of the OME and around the main entrance to the library doors.  Those doors will remain open and functional until a new entry door is installed.  They anticipate the new door will be installed on 12/10/22, possibly on 12/3/22, if time allows. 

The weekend following the installation of the new door, the opener/badge readers will be relocated to new door and entry will be relocated.  They anticipate the stairwell demolition and construction will take place at the end of December.   

Duct work construction on the ducts from E2.300 to across the hall will close group study rooms 200, 202, and 300 on 12/10/22. 

Library upgrades to CINAHL Ultimate

The Library has upgraded its CINAHL subscription to CINAHL Ultimate, which provides full text for more of the most used journals in the CINAHL index than any other database. It covers more than 50 nursing specialties and includes quick lessons, evidence-based care sheets, CEU modules and research instruments. Additionally, it includes rigorous curation and indexing of open access (OA) journals, which has resulted in a growing collection of 1,253 active global OA journals.

Ancestry® Library Edition arrives

The UTSW Library has recently acquired the database Ancestry® Library Edition (ProQuest). This database is perfect for both the casual researcher of genealogy and the expert. It is the library version of the paid Ancestry subscription but with a few differences.

  • Users are not allowed to save items to a new or existing family tree, they may email items or save them to a flash drive.
  • Forums and advice on how to search for difficult family members are available, as well as forms to print to build your own family tree.
  • Users may search records from around the world, but please note that records are not translated from their original language.

Texas Universities Reach Historic Deal with Elsevier: TLCUA Saves Texas Universities Millions Collectively

(November 30, 2022) Texas Library Coalition for United Action (TLCUA) is pleased to announce that it has concluded negotiations with Elsevier, and all TLCUA members have signed or are finalizing new agreements for subscription journal access. In 2019, 44 public and private university campuses across Texas joined together to form TLCUA to think creatively about access to faculty publications and the sustainability of journal subscriptions. TLCUA has negotiated with Elsevier, the world’s largest publisher of scientific journals, including The Lancet and Cell and over 2,500 other journals covering topics in medicine, biology, psychology, engineering, business and more. The TLCUA effort aligns with other libraries across academia that have sought to evolve the relationship between libraries and publishers and find new ways to thrive together.

All TLCUA members will receive a discount on journal subscriptions—some as high as 30%—while still maintaining significant amounts of access to journals and combined, will realize a savings of over $4.75M annually. Beyond initial cost savings, Elsevier agreed to a maximum annual increase of 2% over the course of the license agreement, with some years as low as 0%, which is significantly lower than industry standard.

John Sharp, Chancellor of the Texas A&M University System, said, “Since the beginning of the negotiations, the administration and faculty have stood behind the libraries in this effort. We are proud that so many institutions in Texas came together to realize cost savings and increase access not only in Texas but around the world.”

TLCUA certainly had ambitious goals to negotiate sustainable pricing for strained library budgets in higher education, but also made progress on its other goals of improving access to scholarship and providing authors with greater control over their published work over time.

TLCUA and Elsevier have agreed to partner on a pilot project to revert ownership of journal articles back to original authors—and not just those at TLCUA-member institutions. Currently, authors transfer copyright of their work in exchange for that work being published. This pilot will provide for rights to go back to authors after a period of time that will be collaboratively determined with Elsevier. A subset of Elsevier journals will be chosen to study the impact of the copyright reversion pilot for authors and its applicability more broadly to STEM (scientific, technical, engineering and medical) publishers.

Further, all TLCUA-member authors who choose to publish their work under an open access license will have access to discounted author publication charges (APCs). TLCUA also negotiated a license template that removed non-disclosure terms, restrictions on sharing usage data, and 44-year-old limitations on interlibrary loans (i.e., CONTU Guidelines) to expand library collaboration and improve how libraries can share information on journal usage.

“We worked very hard with Elsevier leadership and negotiators to come to an agreement that aligns the values and priorities of our members and those held by Elsevier,” says lead negotiator and open access advocate Jeffrey Spies of 221B Consulting. “I am particularly excited about the copyright pilot project. Copyright is an often-overlooked ingredient in securing a more open scholarship, and the library community has a real opportunity here: to work with authors to share their work openly because it will once again be their work.”

Along with Spies, the team negotiating with Elsevier consisted of faculty, library leaders and librarians with collections expertise representing the diverse membership of TLCUA. They are David Carlson, former Dean of University Libraries at Texas A&M University; Kelly Gonzalez, Assistant Vice President for Library Services at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; Deborah Hathaway, Acquisitions and Collection Development Librarian at the University of Dallas; Ian Knabe, Head of Acquisitions and Resource Sharing at the University of Houston; Asheley Landrum, Associate Professor and interim Assistant Dean for Research in the College of Media & Communication at Texas Tech University; Vagheesh Narasimhan, Assistant Professor of Integrative Biology and Statistics and Data Sciences at the University of Texas Austin; Richard Nollan, former Dean of Libraries at Texas Tech Health Sciences Center; Alexia Thompson-Young, Assistant Director of Scholarly Resources at the University of Texas Austin; Charles Weaver, Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience and Associate Dean for Sciences at Baylor University; and Ginger Williams, Head Acquisitions Administrative Librarian at Texas State University.

Initial workshops to define the parameters of the pilot project will begin soon. TLCUA has begun exploring their next negotiation priorities and other projects that can benefit from state-wide collaboration. Sara Lowman, TLCUA Chair and Vice Provost and University Librarian at Rice University, is enthusiastic about the future of TLCUA. “The Coalition demonstrated what can be done when Texas institutions aligned by their principles work together. We have big plans,” she said.

About TLCUA

TLCUA represents more than 660,000 students and 44,000 faculty. This consortium is one of the largest and most diverse library consortia in the United States. Faculty in the Coalition member libraries account for 7.2% of all research output in the United States and about 6% of all U.S. research published by Elsevier. The economic impact of Coalition members is significant with annual expenditures exceeding $275 million.

Current TLCUA members are:

  • Angelo State University
  • Baylor University
  • Lamar University
  • Prairie View A&M University
  • Rice University
  • Sam Houston State University
  • Stephen F. Austin State University
  • Sul Ross State University
  • Tarleton State University
  • Texas A&M International University
  • Texas A&M University (College Station)
  • Texas A&M University-Central Texas
  • Texas A&M University-Commerce
  • Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi
  • Texas A&M University-Kingsville
  • Texas A&M University-San Antonio
  • Texas A&M University School of Dentistry
  • Texas A&M University-Texarkana
  • Texas Medical Center
  • Texas State University
  • Texas Tech University (Lubbock)
  • Texas Tech University Health Science Center El Paso
  • Texas Tech University Health Science Center Lubbock
  • The University of Dallas
  • The University of Houston
  • The University of Houston Clear Lake
  • The University of Houston Downtown
  • The University of North Texas
  • The University of North Texas Health Science Center
  • The University of Texas at Arlington
  • The University of Texas at Austin
  • The University of Texas at Dallas
  • The University of Texas at El Paso
  • The University of Texas at San Antonio
  • The University of Texas at Tyler
  • The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
  • The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
  • The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler
  • The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
  • The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
  • The University of Texas Permian Basin
  • The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
  • The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
  • West Texas A&M University

Contact

Dr. Jeffrey Spies, TLCUA lead negotiator (+1-219-979-6676; press@221b.io)

80,000+ titles added through De Gruyter ALCEP purchase

Through a purchase by the University of Texas System utilizing funds from the 2022 Academic Library Collection Enhancement Program (ALCEP), the Library provides access to more content for the De Gruyter eBook Subject and University Press Library (UPL) Collections. This purchase fills in the gaps for titles published since previous purchases, as well as UPL course adoption titles that were previously excluded from our license.

New content includes:

  • Columbia University Press eBook Collections (2019-2022)
  • Cornell University Press eBook Collections (2018-2022)
  • Harvard University Press eBook Collections (2019-2022)
  • Princeton University Press eBook Collections (2018-2022)
  • University of Hawaii Press eBook Collections (2018-2022)
  • University of Pennsylvania Press eBook Collections (2019-2022)
  • University of Toronto Press eBook Collections (2018-2022)
  • Yale University Press eBook Collections (2018-2022)
  • De Gruyter Plus eBook Package (2015-2022)
  • Vervuert Iberoamericano eBook Package (2021-2022)
  • Iberoamericana Vervuert eBook Package (2019-2020)

All 80,000+ titles from all purchases are now DRM (digital rights management) free.

Library adds NEJM Journal Watch

The Library is in the process of starting a subscription to NEJM Journal Watch; the subscription officially begins on January 1st, but the publisher has turned on early access for us through the end of the year. It can be accessed through the Ejournals A to Z page.

NEJM Journal Watch summarizes “the most important research, medical news, drug information, public health alerts, and guidelines across 12 specialties”. Specialty areas include cardiology, general medicine, hospital medicine, infectious diseases, neurology, and oncology and hematology.

Articles are accessible in clinical topic collections and a fully searchable and browsable complete archive. Other valuable information includes Clinical Conversations – podcast; HIV and ID Observations and Insights on Residency Training – blogs; Audio General Medicine – audio interviews with study authors; and CME.

October is National Medical Librarians Month and American Archives Month!

In fiscal year 2021, Library staff partnered with clients to discover and apply information for clinical, health care, educational, and research purposes, including:

  • Answering over 2,600 reference questions
  • Teaching 374 educational events attended by 1,799 clients
  • Processing over 4,800 interlibrary loans and document delivery requests

Thank you for using the UT Southwestern Health Sciences Library and Digital Learning Center!

Library DEI Committee hosts webinar on LGBTQ+ Healthcare

Join us on Tuesday, October 11, 2022, for National Coming Out Day. On this day, we celebrate members of the LGBTQ+ community as they share their coming out stories, those of triumph and happiness, as well as those filled with grief and trauma.

A discussion with Leslie McMurray, a local activist, will focus on transgender healthcare and share insights and suggested approaches to LGBTQ+ affirming patient-provider relationships and care. The online discussion will be held at 12 noon. Registration is required.

New Monkeypox Library Guide

On August 5, 2022, Dallas County declared the monkeypox outbreak a health emergency.  The Health Sciences Digital Library and Learning Center has created a new Monkeypox Library Guide to quickly refer the UT Southwestern community to high-quality – i.e., primarily clinical and research – information about monkeypox. The guide includes: 

  • Monkeypox information from local, state, national and international organizations 
  • Recent articles from PubMed  
  • General search strategies in PubMed and Scopus 
  • Guidelines from CDC and WHO   
  • CDC Monkeypox updates 
  • Consumer health information 
  • Related textbook chapters 

The Guide will be updated as the monkeypox information landscape evolves. Please email the Library if you have identified other key resources that we should consider for inclusion.