Improved affiliation search in Scopus helps you find your faculty publications

Searching for articles by UT Southwestern faculty is easier than ever with the improved affiliation search options in Scopus. You can now search by affiliation name, affiliation city, and affiliation country. This makes it easier to find variations of the UT Southwestern name in the author information in journal articles.
To enter Scopus, use the Quick Links list on the left side of the Library home page. Once in Scopus, click on the Affiliation Search tab, and then go to the improved search by clicking on the link that says, “Would you like to search for documents by affiliation?”
For a thorough search, try entering “sw OR southwestern” in the Affiliation Name box and “Dallas” in the Affiliation City box. For professors with dual appointments, results will be more accurate if you include both affiliations or just search by the author’s name under the Author Search tab.

Learn from your Library's experts anytime, any place

Library-authored tutorials are now available on both the Library’s full and mobile web sites. These customized tutorials give you valuable tips on how to search and find the information that you need.
Library-authored tutorials include:
Library Orientation:
South Campus (main) Library
North Campus Branch Library
University Hospitals
Library Services:
Ejournals A to Z FAQ
Using Interlibrary Loan (ILLiad)
Introduction to PMCIDs and NIH Public Access Policy Compliance
Resources (e.g., Databases):
Sharing a Funding Search in COS
Introduction to Faculty of 1000
Who is Citing Your Articles?
Web of Science
Scopus
Evidence Based Medicine
Doing a Simple EBM Search in CINAHL
Answering an EBM Diagnosis Question in Ovid
Answering an EBM Prognosis Question in Ovid
Answering an EBM Therapy Question in Ovid
Answering an EBM Etiology or Harm Question in Ovid

Announcing the new improved Ovid Portal!

The Library is pleased to announce the creation of the new Ovid Portal, which provides more direct access to the various Ovid databases to which the Library subscribes.
The Library is making this change to reduce the number of clicks that users have to make to access an Ovid database. Previously, users had to go to the Ovid Login page, click on the “Start Ovid” button, and then select the specific database they wish to search. With the new method, they will simply need to click on specific database on the portal page and they will be immediately logged into that database in Ovid.
If you have any questions or comments about this page, please contact LibWebmaster@utsouthwestern.edu.

MD Consult makes changes to off-campus access

Effective April 12, 2011, off-campus users of MD Consult will need to authenticate with either EZProxy or VPN as they do with all other Library resources. The Library is implementing this change to comply with MD Consult’s licensing rules. (Note: Mobile and on-campus users will not be affected.)
Haven’t accessed MD Consult from off-campus before?
There are two methods you can access MD Consult:

  • Go to the Library’s web site or Library Toolbar and select MD Consult from the “Quick Links” section, which will prompt you to login to EZProxy.
  • Login with Juniper VPN and go directly to www.mdconsult.com

Either method requires the use of your UT Southwestern username and password.
In addition to this change, the MD Consult account login page will be removed so users will be taken directly into the resource when they access it from the Library’s web site.
While personal MD Consult accounts will no longer be used to access MD Consult from off-campus, the accounts themselves will not change. Users may login to their accounts to access their saved searches, alerts, and personal settings. The login button is located in the upper right of all MD Consult pages.
For more information about EZProxy and VPN, please see the Library’s Off Campus Access informational page. If you have questions or concerns about MD Consult, contact the Library at 214.648.2001 or LibeResources@UTSouthwestern.edu.

Global Health Photography Exhibit to kick off week of events

The UT Southwestern Global Health Interest Group (GHIG) opened its second annual photography exhibit in the Library with a reception at 4:30 p.m., Monday, April 11. This photo exhibit is co-sponsored by the UT Southwestern Medical Center Library.
Featured in the exhibit are photos taken by UT Southwestern students and faculty during their trips abroad over the past year. The exhibit also includes a globe representing all the countries where students have worked, student reflection papers based on their experiences abroad, and more!
GHIG is also sponsoring the following special programs this week, which are open to everyone.
Global Health at the George W. Bush Institute in Dallas
Tuesday, April 12, from 12 noon – 1 p.m. in Room D1.700
Speaker: Eric Bing, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., M.B.A, Director of Global Health
FREE LUNCH
Panel on Comparing Health Care Systems
Tuesday, April 12, at 4 p.m. in Room D1.104
Panelists: Drs. Nora Gimpel, Fabrice Jotterand, Hong Xiao, and John Gibson.
Moderator: Patti Pagels
PIZZA WILL BE SERVED
Vaccine Awareness
Wednesday, April 13, from 12 noon – 1 p.m. in Room D1.700
Speaker: Albert Karam, M.D., private practice pediatrician
FREE LUNCH
PIG Immunization Fair
Saturday, April 16, from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. (morning and afternoon shifts)
Otis Brown Elementary School, 2501 W 10th Street, Irving, TX 75060 (map)
Panel on Continuing Education in Global Health
Tuesday, April 19, at 4 p.m. in Room D1.104
Panelists: Dr. David McRay, graduates from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the Johns Hopkins MPH program, students who took a 4th year elective abroad, and more! PIZZA WILL BE SERVED
Events co-sponsored by Office of Global Health, Office of Student Affairs, Pediatrics Interest Group (PIG).

Top state official to speak on public health responses to disaster

Sandra Guerra, M.D., M.P.H., Medical Director of the Texas Department of State Health Services Region 8, will speak during an informal dialogue session about cutting edge strategies to address public health needs both during and after disasters. The session will be held from 12 noon to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, April 13, 2011, in the South Campus (main) Library’s Library Administration Conference Room (Room E3.314E).
The Library and two student organizations, the Preventive Medicine Interest Group and the American Medical Student Association, are hosts for Dr. Guerra’s visit.
At both the local and state level, Dr. Guerra has been instrumental in responding to the public heath needs of persons affected by disasters or public health threats. Most recently, her leadership in the recent H1N1 Pandemic Outbreak served as the public health intervention template for the rest of state. She served as the Local Health Authority for Guadalupe County, the first affected community in Texas in the Spring of 2009.
In 2008, Dr. Guerra was medical director and operations chief for “Task Force Ike”, a multi-agency, multi-disciplinary continuity-of-government team that responded to the immediate hurricane aftermath on Galveston Island. In 2008, she also served as the clinical director during the sheltering of over 600 children and adults during the Childrens’ Protective Services investigation of the Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints compound in San Angelo. In 2005, she was the medical director over the provision of health services to approximately 25,000 persons evacuated to San Antonio during Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
A light lunch will be served. Seating is limited, so come a little early!
For more information, contact the Preventive Medicine Interest Group: utswpmig@gmail.com.

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.