Download ebooks now for offline reading later

Library users now have the option to either read electronic books from eBooks on EBSCOhost while online or download content from the collection to desktops, laptops, and mobile devices. Once downloaded, reading no longer requires an Internet connection. Traveling for the holidays? Take a library ebook along!

The eBooks on EBSCOhost collection includes more than 50,000 full-text ebooks, and these ebooks may be found through the Library’s online catalog or within the EBSCOhost database

A sample of available titles in this collection:

  • Official Guide to Texas State Parks and Historic Sites
  • The Diabetic Gourmet Cookbook: More than 200 Healthy Recipes From Homestyle Favorites to Restaurant Classics
  • Introduction to Statistics through Resampling Methods and Microsoft Office Excel
  • Practice Makes Perfect: Spanish Vocabulary
  • Cognitive-behavioral Therapy for Smoking Cessation: A Practical Guidebook to the Most Effective Treatments
  • Medical Ethics in the Renaissance

Ebooks may be checked out with a “My EBSCOhost” account. The average checkout period is 7 days. If an ebook is already checked out by someone else, simply place a hold on the item. You will be notified as soon as the item is available.

To check out ebooks, you will need to create a “My EBSCOhost” account. To transfer content to a desktop computer or laptop, you will also need an Adobe ID and must install Adobe Digital Editions on your computer. To transfer content to a mobile device, you will need an Adobe ID and a compatible e-reader app. Not sure if your device is compatible? Check the list of compatible ebook readers.

For more information, check the eBooks on EBSCOhost FAQ. For other questions or problems about eBooks on EBSCOhost, contact liberesources@utsouthwestern.edu.

 

EndNote X6 classes for researchers and administrative professionals

The recently upgraded EndNote X6 provides flexible, time-saving tools for searching, organizing, and sharing your research; creating your bibliography; and writing your paper.  The Library will offer two training sessions for beginners:

Beginning EndNote: Researchers
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
1 – 2:30 p.m
Library Informatics Classroom (Room E2.310A)

This 90-minute class is designed for primary content searchers (faculty, fellows, graduate students) who use licensed databases such as Ovid MEDLINE, PubMed, and the Library’s full-text Electronic Journals A-Z.

Beginning EndNote: Administrative and Research Professionals
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
10 – 11 a.m.
Library Informatics Classroom (Room E2.310A)

This 60-minute class is designed for users who are primary recipients of citation information (researchers and administrative assistants) and are tasked to collect citations, keep reference lists current, and update article submissions for researchers.

Hands-on classes cover:

  • Downloading citation information from online database searches
  • Importing, organizing, and inserting references into Microsoft Word
  • Downloading licensed PDFs to the citation automatically
  • Organizing references, images, and PDFs
  • Creating and modifying bibliographies in recommended publication formats without retyping

Register on the Library Class Registration page. For assistance or individualized instruction, contact Therona Ramos by phone at 214-648-5073.

EndNote X6 is available at no charge to UT Southwestern affiliates. A Windows or Mac version may be downloaded from the Information Resources (IR) EndNote Page.

 

UT Southwestern photo history now online

UT Southwestern Images, 1943-Present” is a new online collection of more than 550 searchable images that illustrate the history of UT Southwestern. The images portray the people, campus, and events of our institution from its founding in 1943 (as Southwestern Medical College) up to the present. Each image has a descriptive title, a date, and an explanatory description. The images—mostly photographs—have been selected from more than 10,000 photos held in the Library’s UT Southwestern Archives.

The individuals portrayed are largely those who have made notable contributions to UT Southwestern and/or to medicine or medical education through their research, patient care, teaching, or campus administration. Also included are photos of students and staff in everyday campus settings. Small- or medium-sized images may be downloaded or printed for educational use.

You can access the new “UT Southwestern Images, 1943-Present” collection from the campus web site: in the quick links area of the Mission & History page. The collection may also be accessed by clicking on the thumbnail photo on the right sidebar of the Library home page.

Share the collection with others via this link: http://www.utsouthwestern.edu/library/utswimages

For more information about the collection, contact Bill Maina, the Library’s Archivist, by email or at 214-648-2629.

Library hosts reception to celebrate new issue of SCOPE on November 15

On November 15, 2012, the Library, the editors of SCOPE, and the Medical Humanities Interest Group invite you to a reception and reading to celebrate the latest issue of UT Southwestern’s journal of creative writing and art on campus. The reception will begin with refreshments at 4:30 p.m. in the South Campus (main) Library

At 5 p.m. a special presentation will be given by Ted Gioia, author of Healing Songs and The History of Jazz, on music and the humanities as sources of positive change in the lives of individuals and communities. In addition, SCOPE contributors will read from their latest works.

For more information, contact either Julia Mattson (julia.mattson@gmail.com) or John Fullinwider (john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu or 214-648-3801).

SCOPE is UT Southwestern’s online literary magazine featuring writing and art created on the UT Southwestern campus. The magazine serves as a vehicle for the sharing and communication of experiences in medicine, from patient care to medical research, through an artistic lens. The works published in SCOPE aim to promote discussion, reflection, and a sense of community at UT Southwestern.

Ted Gioia is the author of eight books, including The History of Jazz, Delta Blues, and Healing Songs.  The Dallas Morning News has called him “one of the outstanding music historians in America”.  He holds degrees from Stanford University, Oxford University, and Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business and has also released recordings as a pianist, composer, and record producer.  His current research focuses on how music can serve as a change agent in the lives of individuals and communities.

 

Library presents Health Care Policy Forum on aging on November 14

On November 14, 2012, the UT Southwestern Library and the Dallas Area Agency on Aging will co-sponsor a U.S. Health Care Policy Forum presentation by Craig Rubin, M.D., Chief of Geriatrics Section, Department of Internal Medicine, entitled “Changing Aging: Reflections on Geriatrics Then & Now”. The program, which is free and open to all, will be held from 12 noon to 1 p.m. in the McDermott Lecture Hall (Room D1.602).

Currently, the population of Americans 65 and older is approximately 13% of the population, but that number is expected to nearly double – to more than 70 million – by 2030. Therefore, providing high-quality, cost-effective healthcare to older adults is imperative.

According to the American Geriatric Society:

  • One in five Americans will be eligible for Medicare by 2030.
  • More than 20% of older adults have at least five chronic conditions, such as heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, osteoporosis, and dementia.
  • Older adults with more than four chronic conditions account for 80% of Medicare spending.
  • Older adults access healthcare services more than younger adults and children. They account for:
    • 26% of all physician office visits;
    • 35% of all hospital stays;
    • 34% of all prescriptions;
    • 38% of emergency medical services responses; and
    • 90% of all nursing home use.

What changes are necessary in health policy, clinical practice, and medical education to meet the challenges of an aging population?  Dr. Rubin, whose career has spanned this “graying” of America, will offer his insights from 30 years of research and care of elderly people.

Ramona Rhodes, M.D., Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine, will host the event. Lunch will be served; come early! For more information, contact John Fullinwider by phone at 214-648-3801.

Craig Rubin, M.D., graduated from New Jersey Medical School in 1982.  In 1985 he completed his residency training in Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern and joined the Department of Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern in Dallas the same year. In 1989 Dr. Rubin was named Chief of the newly created Geriatrics Section, a title he retains today.  He was promoted to Professor in 2000 and is the Director of the Mildred Wyatt and Ivor P. Wold Center for Geriatric Care.  He also holds the Margaret and Trammell Crow Distinguished Chair in Alzheimer’s and Geriatrics Research, the Seymour Eisenberg Distinguished Professorship in Geriatric Medicine, and the Neill Walsdorf, Sr. Professorship in Geriatric Research.  He is actively involved in patient care, teaching and research. He has published in numerous peer-reviewed journals in the areas of comprehensive geriatric assessment, osteoporosis, Alzheimer’s disease, and medical education.  Dr. Rubin serves on the American Geriatrics Society Public Policy Committee and is the principal investigator of UT-SAGE, a 4-year, $2-million grant from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation to strengthen physician training in geriatrics.

Ramona Rhodes, M.D., M.P.H., is Assistant Professor, Division of General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics Section at UT Southwestern. Dr. Rhodes completed a clinical geriatrics fellowship and postdoctoral research fellowship at Rhode Island Hospital and Brown University’s Center for Gerontology and Health Care Research, during which time she was named a Haffenreffer Fellow in Medical Sciences for excellence in fellowship from the Graduate Medical Education Department of Rhode Island Hospital. Her current research projects look at access to hospice for African Americans, racial differences in the quality of care patients receive at the end of life, and racial differences in feeding tube insertion among persons with advanced cognitive impairment.

Forum Sponsors: UT Southwestern Medical Center Library, UT School of Public Health/Dallas Campus, UT Southwestern School of Health Professions, Medical Humanities Interest Group, UT Southwestern Department of Family Medicine/Division of Community Medicine, Community Council of Greater Dallas/Dallas Area Agency on Aging, UT Southwestern Department of Clinical Sciences, and UT Southwestern Clinical and Translational Alliance for Research (UT-STAR)