New online photo exhibit & repository launched; highlights Dallas medical history

A collection of 500+ historic photos documenting the history of medical care and medical education in Dallas is now on the Library web site. Each photo is dated and accompanied by descriptive information.
Dallas Medical History, 1890-1975: A Digital Collection debuted March 30 on the Library web site. It consists of two complementary parts:
Dallas Medical Images, 1890-1975: A repository of 500+ images from the Library’s collection which portray institutions, people, and events that have played a role in Dallas medicine. The repository can be searched by keyword. About 200 images portray the history of UT Southwestern’s predecessor institutions (e.g., Southwestern Medical College). Another 200 illustrate the history of St. Paul Hospital from 1896-1975 and the St. Paul School of Nursing from 1900-1971. The remaining 100 or so images document other institutions, people and events in Dallas medicine, including about 40 images of Parkland Memorial Hospital.
Medical Care Milestones in Dallas, 1890-1975: An exhibit of 60 high-interest images, arranged in chronological order, that show highlights in the development of medical care in Dallas. Expanded descriptions explain the significance and context of the subject matter. Most of these images are also in the repository, but–to enrich the exhibit–thirteen have been added from the collection of the Dallas Public Library and other sources.
This project has been funded in whole or in part with Federal funds from the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, under Contract No. N01-LM-6-3505 with the Houston Academy of Medicine-Texas Medical Center Library.

For Rent: Library Informatics Classroom

Due to high demand, the Library Classroom (Room E2.310A) is available for rent by campus groups. The classroom has 18 computers for students and an instructor’s station, as well as an overhead projector, projection screen, and whiteboard. The room also includes a telephone at the instructor’s station, which can be used to host webinars as well as classes.
Daily rental rates are:

  • Up to four (4) hours: $100
  • More than four (4) hours: $200

Advance notice is required for all room requests, but the amount of advance notice varies depending on the specific needs of the room. Please refer to the About the Library Classroom page for more information. Room requests may be submitted directly from the Library Informatics Classroom Rental Request Form.

Changes to the Library Toolbar

Conduit, the online vendor that is used to create the Library Toolbar, has decided to switch their search partner from Google to Bing. Therefore, the following changes have been implemented immediately to the Library Toolbar:

  1. All “default” searches are routed to Bing instead of Google. However, users are able to continue searching the Library web site, Library catalog, and other Library sites by clicking on the down arrow by the “Go” button on the toolbar and selecting the appropriate site to search.
  2. The quick links to search multiple resources have been removed from the search results page.

Please see the Library Toolbar FAQ for further information about the toolbar.

Noted historian re-examines the end of segregation at St. Paul Hospital in 1954

On Thursday, March 31, please come and hear Marvin Dulaney, Ph.D., Professor of History, University of Texas at Arlington, speak about Dismantling Segregation at St. Paul Hospital: June 1954. The presentation will be held from 12 noon to 1 p.m. in the UT Southwestern Medical Center’s McDermott Lecture Hall (Room D1.602). Everyone is welcome to attend, and pre-registration is not required. A light lunch will be served.
A nationally recognized historian and expert on African-American history in Dallas, Dr. Dulaney will re-examine this turning point in 1954, when St. Paul Hospital became the first local hospital to open its doors to Black physicians. The presentation is co-sponsored by the UT Southwestern Library and the UT Southwestern Office of Faculty Diversity & Development. The host for the event will be Byron Cryer, M.D., Associate Dean for Faculty Diversity & Development, and the event will be moderated by James Hopkins, Ph.D., Altshuler Distinguished Teaching Professor, Department of History, Southern Methodist University.
Dr. Dulaney teaches American history, African-American history, public history, and the history of the American Civil Rights Movement in UTA’s undergraduate and graduate history programs. From 1985-1994, he served as the Curator of History with the Dallas Museum of African-American Life and Culture. He has published scholarly articles and reviews in the Journal of Negro History, Civil War History, Southwestern Historical Quarterly, The Houston Review, The Historian, Pacific Historical Review, Texas Journal of Ideas, History and Culture, Legacies, Encyclopedia of African-American Civil Rights, Locus, The Georgia Historical Quarterly, The New Handbook of Texas, Our Texas, African Americans: Their History, The South Carolina Encyclopedia, The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, and The African American Experience in Texas History: An Anthology. He is a graduate of Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio, where he earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in history, magna cum laude. He earned his Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in American and African-American history at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio.
Dr. Hopkins is a specialist in modern British social and intellectual history, studying at the University of Oklahoma, Cambridge University, and the University of Texas at Austin where he received his Ph.D. He is the author of two books, the more recent of which is Into the Heart of the Fire: The British in the Spanish Civil War (Stanford, 1998, 2000). In 1998 he was inducted into the SMU’s Academy of Distinguished Teachers. In 2001 he was named the university’s outstanding scholar/teacher. Dr. Hopkins has served two terms as chair of the Clements Department of History at SMU.
Dr. Cryer assists UT Southwestern in recruiting and retaining the very best faculty and promoting the careers of women and underrepresented minorities. From 1997 to 2010, he held the position of Associate Dean for Minority Student Affairs for UT Southwestern Medical School. In this capacity, he assisted the medical school in its recruitment of medical students and focused on diversity initiatives consistent with the medical school’s mission-based goals. In his professional capacity as a physician investigator, Dr. Cryer is a gastroenterologist with investigational interests in peptic ulcer disease. Dr. Cryer obtained his undergraduate degree from Harvard College, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and his M.D. degree from Baylor College of Medicine, where he also obtained his internal medicine residency training. He obtained his gastroenterology fellowship training at UT Southwestern where he became a member of the gastroenterology faculty and is now the John C. Vanatta III Professor of Internal Medicine.

Health and Human Services Forum unpacks the Texas budget

On Tuesday, March 29, you are invited to hear Becky Sykes, President, Dallas Women’s Foundation, present “Gendering the Texas Budget: State Priorities as if Women and Children Mattered” from 12 noon to 1 p.m. in the McDermott Lecture Hall (Room D1.602). Everyone is welcome to attend, and pre-registration is not necessary. A light lunch will be served.
This forum is co-sponsored by the Library, Women in Science and Medicine Advisory Committee, University of Texas School of Public Health/Dallas Regional Campus, UT Southwestern Department of Psychiatry, and other campus organizations. The host for the event will be Patrice Vaeth, Dr.P.H., professor of health promotion and behavioral science, UT School of Public Health.
Sykes and her colleagues at the Foundation, along with researchers from the Center for Public Policy Priorities, have prepared a gender responsive analysis of the current year Texas budget. This analysis examines the state’s $182.5 billion budget through a gender lens, focusing on the impact of fiscal policy on the health, safety, education, and economic security of women and girls in Texas.
With the legislature contemplating significant cutbacks in health and human services funding, this innovative look at the state budget provides fresh insights into tough policy questions. For example, Sykes’s carefully documented analysis reveals that “women and girls in Texas have, at every stage of life, among the worst health care access in the U.S. Overall, 23 percent of Texas females have no health insurance, putting the state at 50th in the nation in terms of access to health care.”
Sykes was named President and CEO of the Dallas Women’s Foundation in March 1999 after a lifetime of civic leadership, including years with the Dallas League of Women Voters, Junior League, and City of Dallas Planning Commission. It is now the largest of the 150 women’s foundations around the world. The Foundation grants more than $2 million annually to local programs that benefit women and girls. She is a trustee of Austin College in Sherman, Texas, where she was honored with a Distinguished Alum Award. She has also received the Athena Award from the Dallas Regional Chamber, as well as other recognitions. She is on the Advisory Council of the Women’s Philanthropy Institute at the University of Indiana.
Patrice Vaeth, Dr.P.H., is assistant professor of health promotion and behavioral sciences at the UT School of Public Health/Dallas Regional Campus. She received her doctorate of public health from the School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley. Dr. Vaeth also completed NIH-funded fellowships in alcohol epidemiology and cardiovascular disease epidemiology. Her research interests include gender and ethnic disparities in health and alcohol epidemiology.
For information, contact John Fullinwider by email at john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu or by phone at 214-648-3801.

Spring Library Showcase, March 29 – 31, 2011: New Views of Dallas Medical History, Texas Budget Policy, and Cutting Edge Technology

The Library’s Spring Showcase, March 29-31, delivers fresh perspectives via four exciting events.
Tuesday, March 29, 12 noon to 1 p.m., McDermott Lecture Hall D1.602
Becky Sykes, President of the Dallas Women’s Foundation, presents “Gendering the Texas Budget: State Priorities as if Women & Children Mattered.” In the face of impending massive revenue shortfalls for health, human services, and education, Sykes’s innovative gender-responsive analysis provides new insights into the state’s most recent $182.5 billion budget which, in her words, “is perhaps the most accurate statement of its real policies and values.” Host: Patrice Vaeth, Dr.P.H. UT School of Public Health. Light lunch served.
Wednesday, March 30, Noon to 1 p.m. South Campus Library, E.3.314.E
Discover the “Latest Digital Tools for Research & Presentation” (e.g., Google’s Fusion Tables, Refine) during this informal workshop presented by Martha Buckbee, M.L.S., and Matt Zimmerman, M.A.. These Library staff members will demonstrate Google’s cutting edge data mapping and presentation tools. Seating is limited; pre-register at: www.utsouthwestern.edu/libraryclasses. Refreshments served; bring your lunch.
Wednesday, March 30, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. South Campus Library
The Library unveils “Dallas Medical History, 1890 – 1975, A Digital Collection”, an online group of more than 500 photos from the UT Southwestern Library’s Archives and History of Medicine collections. These photos illustrate the medical history of Dallas from the opening of Parkland Hospital in 1894 to the expansion of the UT Southwestern campus in the 1970s. See these compelling images at the reception and starting at 5 p.m., enjoy “Reflections on the History of Medicine in Dallas” with John S. Fordtran, M.D., Director of Gastrointestinal Physiology, Baylor University Medical Center. Refreshments and hors d’oeuvres served.
Thursday, March 31, Noon to 1 p.m., McDermott Lecture Hall D1.602
Marvin Dulaney, Ph.D., professor of history, University of Texas at Arlington, speaks on Dismantling Segregation at St. Paul Hospital. Dr. Dulaney, a nationally recognized historian and expert in African American history in Dallas, re-visits this turning point in 1954, when St. Paul became the first local hospital to open its doors to Black physicians. Host: Historian James Hopkins, Ph.D., Southern Methodist University. Light lunch served.
The lectures and reception are open to all; pre-registration is not necessary.
For more information, contact John Fullinwider, 214-648-3801 or Bill Maina, 214-648-2629.

Need an edge on evidence-based medicine searching? Try your Library's new tutorials

Practicing evidence-based medicine (EBM) means finding and evaluating the best current research and combining it with clinical expertise to make treatment decisions. An evidence-based literature search always begins with a clinical question. Each of the four main types of questions has a particular search strategy that will retrieve the best results. Watch the Library’s tutorials to see a demonstration of how to do a simple search in Ovid MEDLINE for each of the four main clinical question types:

In addition to MEDLINE, nurses and allied health professionals may want to do evidence-based searches in CINAHL Plus with Full Text, which offers some special limiters to help them retrieve the best results. An EBM search in CINAHL Library tutorial is also available for these limiters.

Library Staff Art Show now on display

The Library Staff Art Show – on display from March 1, 2011, through May 20, 2011, in the South Campus (Main) Library – highlights the artistic talents of the UT Southwestern Library’s staff and faculty and their family members.
Eighty-one unique works of art are on display, including paintings, photographs, quilts, handcrafted cards, fishing lures, knitting, jewelry, illustrations, poetry, and more. The exhibit is featured on the walls of the Library’s Main Floor and in three of its display cases and is organized by a natural elements theme.
The exhibit was organized by Jane Scott and Anne Hollingworth, with additional curation assistance provided by Catherine Schack and Joseph Tan. A supplemental handout – available at the beginning of the exhibit – includes contact information for the artists and interesting facts about many of the displayed works.

Find protocols that make a difference in your lab or clinical setting

Protocols assist researchers by providing step-by-step information on highly-tested and up-to-date laboratory procedures. Research institutions worldwide use protocols for lab-related procedures in the life sciences, chemistry, medicine, and health care.
Your Library has subscriptions to most of the major protocols including:

Protocol features include:

  • Titles can be searched individually or all at once
  • Monthly, quarterly, or continuous updates and revisions
  • Step-by-step protocol annotations
  • Materials listed for each protocol
  • Detailed instructions for preparation of reagents, solutions, and culture media
  • Commentary from scientific experts
  • Tables and figures for complex procedures
  • Reference materials to accompany procedures and protocols

Access resources on the Library web site by typing the protocol resource in the “Search” box or specific listings on the Library’s Protocols Resources page.