EVENT CANCELLATION: Health Policy Forum focuses on community service learning

Photo of Ruth Berggren, M.D.

On April 23, 2013, this event was cancelled.

On April 30, 2013, everyone is welcome to attend a special presentation entitled Rethinking Medical Education: Community Service Learning & Community Health, which will be given by Ruth Berggren, M.D., Director, Center for Medical Humanities & Ethics, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. The program will be held from 12 to 1 p.m. in McDermott Plaza Lecture Hall (Room D1.602), and it is co-sponsored by the Library and the Department of Family & Community Medicine. Lynne Kirk, M.D., Toni and Tim P. Hartman Distinguished Teaching Professor Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, will host the event, and lunch will be provided.

Community service learning (CSL) holds great potential for medical education and for community health promotion and research.  At UT Southwestern, the Community Action Research Track (CART) and Community Action Research Experience (CARE) provide students and residents the opportunities to work in underserved communities and to participate in community-based participatory research.

Dr. Berggren will explore current best practices and the future of CSL, which can help students to:

  • Address complex problems in complex settings rather than simplified problems in isolation.
  • Engage in problem-solving by requiring participants to gain knowledge of the specific context of their service learning activity and community challenges, rather than only to draw upon generalized or abstract knowledge.
  • Develop critical thinking: the ability to identify the most important issues within a real-world situation.
  • Experience deeper learning because results are immediate and uncontrived.  There are no “right answers” in the back of the book.

As a consequence of this immediacy of experience, CSL is more likely to:

  • Be personally meaningful to participants
  • Generate emotional consequences
  • Challenge values as well as ideas
  • Support social, emotional, and cognitive learning

Dr. Berggren is also Professor of Internal Medicine and the Marvin Forland, MD, Distinguished Professor in Medical Ethics. Prior to being appointed Director of the Center for Medical Humanities & Ethics, she directed the second-year medical school course on infectious diseases and designed a new elective course — “Poverty, Health, and Disease” — that she continues to direct.  Dr. Berggren’s internal medicine training was at Massachusetts General Hospital, followed by a fellowship in infectious diseases at the University of Colorado, where she was a Division of AIDS Fellow funded by the NIH. She then took a faculty position at UT Southwestern, where she pioneered a program for the treatment of Hepatitis C in persons co-infected with HIV. During Hurricane Katrina, Dr. Berggren was the teaching physician assigned to the Infectious Disease ward of New Orleans’ Charity Hospital. She remained at Charity for six days and nights after Katrina struck, working with medical staff to care for critically ill, abandoned patients. After all patients were evacuated from Charity Hospital, Dr. Berggren and her team were rescued by a private jet from Texas. She has subsequently published two articles in the New England Journal of Medicine about this experience and about the impact of hurricane Katrina on health care infrastructure in New Orleans. Dr. Berggren grew up in the Artibonite Valley of central Haiti, just one hour away from Mirebalais, at the Albert Schweitzer Hospital. Following the January 2010 earthquakes in Port au Prince she led relief efforts along the Dominican Republic/Haiti border.

Dr. Kirk is a general internist and geriatrician and has served on several committees relating to the U.S. Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE). She has served on the council of the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM). Dr. Kirk was President of the American College of Physicians, the national specialty organization for internists, in 2006-2007. She has published on medical professionalism, faculty development, clinical guidelines, and patient education.  She chairs the Internal Medicine Residency Review Committee of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and is an Associate Program Director in the internal medicine residency training program at UT Southwestern.

For more information about the forum, please contact John Fullinwider by phone at 214-648-3801 or by email at john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu.

See What’s Brewing at the South Campus Library

The Library is pleased to announce the arrival of the 24/7 hot coffee and cocoa vending machine on the South Campus (main) Library’s Main Floor near the elevators. All drinks are dispensed in large, 16-ounce cups for the low cost of $1.50 each.

Hot drinks available include:

  • Coffee (Regular and Decaf)
  • Café au Lait (Regular, Vanilla, and Mocha flavors)
  • Hot Cocoa

Want additional sugar or milk added to your selection? Just press #(sugar) or 0(milk) before your order number. Instructions are provided at the top of the machine.

Want to use your own cup? No problem! The machine will dispense the coffee to your own 16-oz. mug or tumbler if you place it in the dispenser prior to making your selection.

Health Policy Forum addresses gun violence in America

The UT Southwestern Library is co-sponsoring a presentation by Rashmi Shetgiri, M.D., Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, entitled Rethinking Gun Violence: Perspectives from Pediatrics and Public Health on Wednesday, March 20, 2013. This spring Health Policy Forum will be held from 12 noon to 1 p.m. in the McDermott Plaza Lecture Hall, Room D1.602, and will be hosted by Raul Caetano, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., Dean, UT School of Public Health/Dallas Campus. Light lunch will be provided so please come early!

The tragic murders of schoolchildren in Newtown, Connecticut, last December have riveted the attention of the nation on the issue of gun violence, particularly in the context of mental illness. Can insights from the fields of pediatrics and public health inform our national conversation about guns? Dr. Shetgiri, whose research focuses on youth violence and violence prevention, will address the full range of issues surrounding gun violence in America.  As Congressional hearings convene and lawmakers debate, join us for an opportunity to rethink this urgent issue of preventing gun violence.

Dr. Shetgiri received her undergraduate degree in biology from Drew University and her medical degree from the New Jersey Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, in Newark, through a combined seven-year medical program. She completed her pediatrics residency in the Community Health and Advocacy Training Pprogram in Pediatrics at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and her fellowship in the UCLA Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program. She cares for pediatric patients and teaches pediatric residents at Children’s Medical Center and Los Barrios Unidos Community Health Center in Dallas. Her research focuses on adolescent violence prevention, bullying prevention, racial/ethnic health disparities, and partnered research with Latino communities. She has presented her research at several local and national meetings and has been interviewed by national and international media outlets for her research on bullying and violence prevention.

The forum is free and open to all. Pre-registration is not necessary. For more information, contact john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu, 214-648-3801.

Co-sponsors:  UT School of Public Health/Dallas Campus, UT Southwestern Dept. of Pediatrics/Division of General Pediatrics, Latino Medical Students Association, Medical Humanities Interest Group, Dallas county HHS Public Health Advisory Committee, UT Southwestern School of Health Professions, UT Southwestern Dept. of Family Medicine/Division of Community Medicine, and UT Southwestern Clinical and Translational Alliance for Research (UT-STAR).

New website, new user-friendly features

Your Library is pleased to announce the beta release of its new, improved website, with a new address:  http://library.utsouthwestern.edu. User-friendly features of the website include:

  • Drop-down navigation menu under the header allows users to find resources and Library services more efficiently.
  • New search section in the center allows users to find books, articles, or journal titles much quicker.  Users may also start a PubMed search to retrieve full-text articles, if available, through the or icons.
  • New search section also features searches in other Library websites (e.g., UT Southwestern Institutional Repository and UT Southwestern Archives Collection of digitized photos).
  • Your experience will be optimized regardless of the screen size you are using. We are using the latest web development technologies and techniques, including responsive web design approach. If you access the new website with a mobile device that has a screen size of 7 inches or less, you will be redirected automatically to the newly redesigned mobile website.

The new design is based on numerous usage statistics, usability studies, and client feedback gathered over the last 2-3 years. The selection and placement of content on the home page is determined by the resources and services our clients use the most.

We will be switching from the classic to the new website sometime in March 2013. Please visit your Library’s new website soon and let us know what you think.

Photos illustrate 70 years of campus history

This year marks the 70th anniversary of the opening of Southwestern Medical College in 1943. To honor this milestone, we will be featuring photos illustrating the campus’ past. These photos are drawn from the 600+ images in the digital “UT Southwestern Images, 1943-Present” collection, available from the Library web page. The photo below dates from the late 1940s.

Southwestern Medical College, prefabricated plywood building with sign “Temporary Quarters”

The first campus of Southwestern Medical College was constructed in 1943 of prefabricated plywood buildings (often called “the shacks”) located along Oak Lawn Avenue behind Parkland Hospital on Maple Avenue. The medical school campus soon expanded to other buildings in the neighborhood, but “the shacks” remained the primary campus until 1955, when the Cary Building on Harry Hines Blvd. was completed.

Graduate School students: online ETD submission!

Students in the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences are now able to submit electronic theses or dissertations (ETDs) online using Vireo. Everything students need for this is available at the Library’s Electronic Theses & Dissertations portal:

  • Dissertation preparation instructions
  • Thesis/dissertation template
  • Student guide to online ETD submission
  • Online submission system login

Vireo is an online ETD submission system developed by the Texas Digital Library (TDL). It is used by many institutions in Texas, including Texas A&M University, Texas Tech University, and the University of Texas at Austin.

As the largest ETD contributor, the Graduate School was selected by the Library as the first of the three degree-granting schools at UT Southwestern to test and implement Vireo. The Medical School and the School of Health Professions will work with the Library to implement Vireo after the system receives an upgrade later this year.

Using Vireo, students can submit an ETD online, track the status of an ETD, and submit comments or corrections as needed through the system. For Graduate School and Library staff, information about each ETD is available within the system, making processing much quicker and more efficient.

Black History Month Poster Exhibit honors pioneers of medicine

The Black History Month poster exhibit honors the many contributions of African Americans in science and in the field of medicine. Nine of the 18 posters are displayed on the Main Floor of the South Campus (main) Library; the remaining posters are on D1 across from the Food Court.

The exhibit is sponsored by the UT Southwestern Chapter of the Student National Medical Association in conjunction with the Office of Minority Student Affairs and the Office of Faculty Diversity and Development. It will remain throughout the month of February.

EndNote X6 classes available for researchers and administrative & research 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 offers two training sessions for beginners:

Beginning EndNote: Administrative and Research Professionals
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
1 – 2:30 p.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.

Beginning EndNote: Researchers
Thursday, February 21, 2013
10 – 11:30 a.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.

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.

Nature on view in Library photo exhibit

Roots and Reflection - Eric Schoondergang

Roots and Reflection – Eric Schoondergang

A new exhibit of nature photographs is now on display through April 26, 2013, in the South Campus (main) Library.

  • Fifteen color photos by Terry Cockerham portray the desolate grandeur of Texas’ Big Bend National Park region.
  • Eight photos by Eric Schoondergang are large-scale color close-ups of delicate flowers which seem to float in the air. Six other photos show a mix of topics.

A flyer is available for pickup near the Library entrance, which gives contact information and a brief profile of each photographer.

Cerro Castellan #1 - Terry Cockerham

Cerro Castellan #1 – Terry Cockerham

Library provides wireless PC printing via print card stations

Have you purchased a Library print card and want to print to a Library printer from a campus laptop, lab, or office PC computer? Now you can!

Campus PCs and laptops that are on the UTWPA2 wireless network can now print to designated Library print stations at the South Campus (main) or North Campus Branch libraries. All print stations are designated with a blue sign (see example). All print jobs will be held in the cue for retrieval at a Library print station for up to 24 hours.

Please note this service is currently not available for printers provided by Student Computing. Although these printers are housed in both Library locations for 24/7 student access and location convenience, they are not operated, maintained, supplied, funded, or administered by the Library.

To learn more about your Library’s printing services, go to the Printing and Photocopying page on the Library’s web site.