Use Library's "Live Chat" for interLibrary loan/borrowing questions

Help is now available through “Live Chat” on the Library’s Interlibrary Loan (ILLiad) page for individuals with questions about the interlibrary loan process. This service will be available during our office hours (Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.). An ILLiad account is not necessary to initiate a chat conversation.

Complex or time-consuming questions should be directed to our interlibrary loan specialists via email or phone at 214.648.2002. You may also click on the “Email/Phone” tab under the “Ask A Librarian” section on the right for other contact methods.

New exhibit on Native Hawaiian holistic health on display through July 28

The National Library of Medicine’s (NLM) traveling exhibit, A Voyage To Health, explores the recent revival of the ancient arts of navigation and voyaging that first brought the people of Hawaiʻi to their island homes. Much of the valuable knowledge of voyaging was lost as a consequence of the suppression of traditional ways. As part of a wider movement to reintroduce traditional ways, Native Hawaiians are mastering the knowledge and skills of their elders. By restoring their heritage, this new generation seeks to heal the people.

A Voyage to Health explores this resurgence and its significance for health, well-being, and self-determination.

The NLM online teaching module, Healing Elements: A Native Hawaiian Perspective, explores various themes and writings on this subject.

“Early History of Medicine in Dallas, 1841 to 1900” now online

Dr. Richard Wisdom Allen, (left) and Dr. Henry K. Leske Operating in a Home

A rare 400-page, illustrated history of medicine in Dallas from 1841 to 1900 is now available for viewing on the Library’s web site.  The history was written in 1951 by a Dallas native for a master’s thesis at the University of Texas at Austin, and only four copies in print are known to exist. The author relied not only on printed source material, but also on interviews with long-time Dallas residents. The work is illustrated with portraits and photographs.

This document is housed in the Library’s History of Medicine Collection web site.

Need resources while in transition this summer?

The Library is highlighting two useful databases for clients who will be leaving UT Southwestern and will no longer have access to the university’s full-text articles. Please be aware that these resources have a much narrower full-text range than what might be provided by medical libraries.

PubMed is a searchable citation database with more than 21 million biomedical literature items from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Abstract, author, article title, journal title, and other identifying information make up the search results. Access to full-text articles is through links but varies by publisher. See the PubMed Quickstart Guide for more information.

PMC (formerly PubMed Central) is PubMed’s companion database: a free, full-text archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature at the U.S. National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine (NIH/NLM). Literature items are deposited by participating publishers, as well by authors whose manuscripts have been submitted in compliance with the NIH Public Access Policy and similar policies of other research funding agencies. See the User’s Guide or Journal List for more information.

For training at no charge before you leave, choose MEDLINE searching via PubMed from the individualized training page.

Calling all artists! Employee/student art show invites entries

The annual campus “On My Own Time” art show and competition is now accepting online entries for the exhibit to begin in the Library on July 23. UT Southwestern employees, students and their spouses are invited to enter. The drop-off date for the art is July 17 or 18. Details can be found at www.utsouthwestern.edu/omot.

Art in a wide variety of formats is eligible to be entered:
• Works on canvas or paper
• Photography: color or black & white
• Enhanced photography & computer art
• Sculpture
• Ceramics or wood
• Jewelry & metal
• Textiles/fiber art
• Mixed media

Exercise your creativity and enter the show!

14th Annual Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Scientific Day References

Resources from the UT Southwestern Medical Center Library
Library Home Page
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation – Electronic Journals and Books
Biomedical & General Resources / Databases

Journal Articles by Scientific Day Speakers
Dr. M. Elizabeth Sandel
Stroke Rehabilitation Outcomes
Traumatic Brain Injury

Dr. Mark P. Goldberg
“New light on white matter”, Stroke. 2003; 34: 330-332

For Library assistance, contact:
Catherine Schack, 214-648-7684
Catherine.Schack@utsouthwestern.edu
Library Liaison to Departments of Neurology and
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation