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

Help preserve UT Southwestern’s History

UT Southwestern Library's Archives

The Library is looking for photographs, publications and unpublished material which document the history of UT Southwestern, including the work and lives of notable faculty and administrators. If you have materials which depict significant aspects of UT Southwestern’s history, please contact the Library’s Archivist, Bill Maina, by email; or by phone at 214-648-2629.

 Examples of materials wanted include:

  • Photographs
  • Publications of the campus (especially need campus phone books from 1988 to 1996)
  • Publications about UT Southwestern and notable members of the campus community

Materials added to the UT Southwestern Archives will be preserved for posterity in a safe, controlled environment, and made available to the campus community.

Library presents Health Care Policy Forum on April 25

Health Policy Forum April 25

The Library is sponsoring a special presentation by Carol Tamminga, M.D., entitled A Psychiatrist Then & Now: Reflections on a Changing Profession. This presentation, which will be held on Wednesday, April 25, 2012, from 12 to 1 p.m. in McDermott Lecture Hall D1.602, focuses on the many changes that have affected clinical research and practice in psychiatry over the years.

For example, the first edition of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM, 1952) had 130 pages and included 106 mental disorders. The current edition (DSM-IV-TR, 2000), describes 287 conditions in more than 900 pages. A fifth edition is expected to be published next year. From its psychoanalytic premises, dominant in the immediate Post-war Era, to its emerging approaches in neurobiology and genetics, psychiatry has undergone a sea-change in the past half century, responding to profound changes in society (e.g., removal of homosexuality from the category of disorders) and to progress in neuroscience (e.g., neuroimaging).

Dr. Tamminga is Chair of Psychiatry and Chief of Translational Neuroscience Research in Schizophrenia at UT Southwestern. She holds the Communities Foundation of Texas Chair in Brain Science along with the Lou and Ellen McGinley Distinguished Chair and the McKenzie Chair in Psychiatry.

Dr. Tamminga’s lecture will be hosted by Raul Caetano, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., Dean of the UT School of Public Health, Dallas Regional Campus, and Dean of the UT Southwestern School of Health Professions.

The program is free and open to all. Pre-registration is not required. A light lunch will be served; come early!  For more information, please contact John Fullinwider by phone at 214-648-3801 or by email at john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu.

April 23 – 25 Library Showcase schedule

Libray Showcase April 2012

Monday – April 23:OvidSP Trainer Glenn McAlpine will be conducting the following Monday training sessions on both South and North campuses. Registration is recommended. Space is limited.
9:30-11 a.m. – Library Classroom (E2.310A)
OvidSP: MEDLINE & PsycINFO Databases.
Presenter: Glenn McAlpine, Training Manager, Wolters Kluwer Heath Medical Research.

11 a.m.-12 noon – Library Classroom (E2.310A)
OvidSP: Advanced MEDLINE searching.
Presenter:  Glenn McAlpine.

2-3 p.m. – NL3.120 Graduate School Lecture Hall
OvidSP: Introduction to PsycINFO Database.
Presenter: Glenn McAlpine.

3-4 p.m. – NL3.120 Graduate School Lecture Hall
OvidSP: Introduction to MEDLINE Database.
Presenter: Glenn McAlpine.

Tuesday – April 24:
11:00 a.m.-12 noon – Library Classroom (E2.310A)
Designing Your Best Academic Poster.
Presenter: Jane Scott, Design and Promotion Specialist, UT Southwestern Medical Center Library.

Learn a step-by-step process for creating a poster: evaluate software pros and cons, identify effective basic principles of design, explore formatting tips and tricks for easy graphics and table creation within a poster. Evaluate sample posters for effective use of design principles, readability and impact. Bring your poster samples and questions for technical troubleshooting and individual assistance. Registration is recommended. Space is limited.

Wednesday – April 25:
12 noon-1 p.m. – D1.602
A Psychiatrist Then & Now: Reflections on a Changing Profession.
Presenter: Carol Tamminga, MD, Chairman of Psychiatry and Chief of Translational Neuroscience Research in Schizophrenia, UT Southwestern Medical Center.
Host: Raul Caetano, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., Dean of the UT School of Public Health, Dallas Regional Campus, and Dean of the UT Southwestern School of Health Professions.

Dr. Tamminga will explore the rise of neuroscience as the basis for psychiatry and the policy/practice dilemmas that have emerged as a result.  DSM revisions occurring this year, reported shortages of Ritalin and other drugs, and recent research controversies fuel changes in the profession.

Upcoming campus programs highlight public health initiatives for National Public Health Week, April 2-6

In celebration of National Public Health Week, the Student Public Health Association of Dallas presents a full week of lectures and discussions that focus on both local and global public health initiatives. The programs, which are co-sponsored by the UT School of Public Health/Dallas Regional Campus and the UT Southwestern Medical Center Library, are listed as follows:

Monday, April 2, 2012
Global Public Health
Elizabeth Race, M.D.
Room C2.106, 12-1 p.m.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Ignaz Semmelweis & The History of Epidemiology
Robert Haley, M.D.
Room D1.100, 12-1 p.m.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Infectious Disease Epidemiology in Dallas: Making a Difference Locally
Wendy Chung, M.D.
Room D1.106, 12-1 p.m.

Thursday, April 5, 2012
Improving the Development of Children: A Public Health Perspective
Margaret Caughy, Sc.D.
Room C2.106, 12-1 p.m.

Friday, April 6, 2012
Bioterrorism, Disaster Preparedness & Public Health
John T. Carlo, M.D., M.S.
Room C2.106, 12-1 p.m.

Everyone is invited. For more information, please contact David Bennett Grinsfelder by email at david.grinsfelder@utsouthwestern.edu or by phone at 214-226-0668.

New NLM Traveling Exhibit features Shakespeare and the Four Humors

Shakespeare exhibit

A traveling banner exhibition, and online exhibition with education resources developed and produced by the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health will be on display for a limited engagement at the South Campus (main) Library from March 19 – April 28, 2012.

William Shakespeare (1564–1616) created characters that are among the richest and most humanly recognizable in all of literature. Yet Shakespeare understood human personality in the terms available to his age—that of the now-discarded theory of the four bodily humors –blood, bile, melancholy, and phlegm. These four humors were thought to define peoples’ physical and mental health, and determined their personalities, as well.

The language of the four humors pervades Shakespeare’s plays, and their influence is felt above all in a belief that emotional states are physically determined. Carried by the bloodstream, the four humors bred the core passions of anger, grief, hope, and fear—the emotions conveyed so powerfully in Shakespeare’s comedies and tragedies.

“And there’s the humor of it” Shakespeare and the four humors explores these themes in a special display featuring images of rare books and incunables from the collection of the National Library of Medicine and the Folger Shakespeare Library.

Curated by Gail Kern Paster, PhD and Theodore Brown, PhD and exhibition design by Riggs Ward Design.