"Find it!" icon explained

The “Find it @ Library — UT Southwestern” icon provides direct access to journal articles from selected databases.

By clicking on the icon, you are linked directly to the full text of the article, if possible, or provided with three other options for obtaining the article:

  • Search the Library’s Ejournals A to Z List of electronic journals (to confirm whether we have the needed journal issue online)
  • Search the Library Catalog (especially for articles in older journals available only in print)
  • Request article through Interlibrary Loan (ILLIAD) (for articles the Library does not own)

For more information on the “Find it!” icon, go to the Find it! UTSW Library FAQ page on the Library Web site.

Find high-impact articles using "Faculty of 1000 Medicine"

Faculty of 1000 Medicine (F1000M) saves you time and effort by identifying and rating the most current high-impact articles and providing expert opinions that explain the key findings and critical impact.
The evaluation and commentary in F1000M is provided by a “faculty” of more than 2,400 top global clinicians and researchers, including seven at UT Southwestern. Faculty members select, rate, and comment on two to four of the most interesting papers they read each month. Rating levels include “Exceptional,” “Must Read,” and “Recommended.” By rating articles based on their individual merits rather than the journal in which they appear, this system provides a useful alternative to impact factors and citation scores.
Features include:

  • “Hidden Jewels”: Identifies high-impact articles published in less widely distributed journals.
  • Top 10s: Lists best, classic and most-viewed papers across the whole of medicine or by specialty.
  • My F1000M: Displays most recently selected papers in your field of interest.
  • Email Alerts: Sends you notices tailored to your area of interest.
  • Advanced Search: Runs and stores simple or sophisticated searches.

F1000M has recently added F1000M Reports, a journal that publishes short commentaries by expert clinicians that focus on the most important studies that are likely to change clinical practice. The commentaries summarize the implications of new research findings for clinicians.
Faculty of 1000 Medicine is a sister product to Faculty of 1000 Biology. To find F1000M on the Library Web site, use the “Quick Links” box.
For more information on F1000M, contact Therona Ramos in the Library by email or by calling 214-648-5073.

Evaluate journal impact with enhanced JCR

JCR (Journal Citation Reports) presents quantitative data that aims to give an objective view of the world’s leading scientifc journals and their impact on the global research community. The JCR Impact Factor is the average number of times an article from a journal published in the last two years has been cited in the JCR year.
How might you use the Impact Factor number? If you are considering submitting an article for publication to two journals (e.g., one with an Impact Factor of 1.2220 and the other with an Impact Factor of 3.503), you would probably submit the article first to the journal with the higher Impact Factor because articles in that journal are – on average – cited more frequently and theoretically are read more than articles in the other journal.
JCR has recently added enhancements:

  • Five-year Impact Factor: Offers a longer-term view than the standard two-year Impact Factor.
  • Eigenfactor Metrics: Uses citing journal data from the entire JCR files to reflect influence and prestige by considering scholarly literature as a network of journal-to-journal relationships. For more information, go to Eigenfactor.org.

JCR offers additional information about each journal:

  • Immediacy Index
  • Article Influence Score
  • Cited Half-life

To help you understand and interpret the data presented in JCR, the publisher has provided:

A caveat: Impact Factors attempt to measure the overall impact of a particular journal. They do not quantify the impact of a particular article. You can find further discussion of this and other aspects of Impact Factors in the Impact Factor article in Wikipedia.org.
To located JCR on the Library Web site, use the “Quick Links” drop down menu on the left sidebar.

Library's electronic journals cover broad subject spectrum

The core of the Library’s electronic journal (ejournal) collection covers the medical and life sciences, but many non-medical ejournals are in the collection as well. They are received as part of ejournal packages that include non-medical titles along with medical ones. Most offer full-text access to published articles.
As a result, the campus community has access to ejournals covering such diverse topics as:

  • Business
  • Computer science
  • Education
  • General interest
  • Human resources management
  • Marketing & public relations
  • Sports & recreation

To check whether an ejournal of interest to you is available from the Library, use the Electronic Journals A to Z list on the Library Web site. If the journal is owned, you can link directly to the full text of the articles.
Among the non-medical journals available are:

  • Adult Education Quarterly
  • Computational Statistics & Data Analysis
  • Computer Aided Design
  • Consumer Reports
  • Harvard Business Review
  • Higher Education
  • Journal of Human Resources
  • PC World
  • Public Relations Quarterly
  • Runner’s World

Library launches delivery service

The Library Intra-Campus Delivery Service (LIDS) is a new service providing free delivery of Library materials to UT Southwestern faculty and staff offices on campus. Items for delivery include:

  • Books owned by the Library that are eligible for check-out
  • Books, journals articles, etc. requested on InterLibrary Loan (ILL) from another library

To request delivery via LIDS:

  • Click on InterLibrary Loan (ILLiad), which is located on the left sidebar under “LIbrary Services” on the Library Web site.
  • Enter your ILLiad username and password.
  • On the next page, click on “New Request.”
  • Enter the appropriate information.
  • At the “How would you like us to deliver this item?” box, select “Hand Delivery” from the drop-down menu.

Some tips:

  • A Library card is required for access to ILLiad.
  • Students and residents/fellows are not eligible for delivery service.
  • If a book, article, etc. must be obtained from another library, there is a $3.50 charge for regular service and $15.00 for rush service.
  • Faculty or staff who only want a book if it is in the Library collection must put “DO NOT BORROW” in the “Notes” field of the request. (To determine if a book is in the Library collection, check the Library’s catalog for print books as well as the Electronic Books page.)
  • Enter the room number for delivery in the “Notes” field. If no room number is given, staff will call to verify the location.
  • A signature is required upon delivery. If no one is available to sign, the package will be returned to the Library and delivery will be attempted the next day.

For more information on LIDS, contact Donna Terlisner by email or by calling 214-648-2002.

MICROMEDEX Point of Care Solution gets quick answers

MICROMEDEX includes comprehensive drug, acute care, and toxicology information for point-of-care use by doctors, nurses, and pharmacists. Now MICROMEDEX provides even faster access to point-of-care data through the “Point of Care Solution” feature, which offers:

  • Fewer clicks to get to the answer you need
  • No lengthy documents to scan
  • Seamless searching across content areas without re-entering search terms
  • Spelling help

To reach the “Point of Care Solution,” first click the “Thompson Healthcare Evidence/Healthcare Series” button on the MCROMEDEX home page. On the next page, click the “Switch to Point of Care Interface” link in the upper right corner of the screen.
The Library’s MICROMEDEX license restricts use to authorized UT Southwestern faculty, staff, students, and contractors who are trained or training in the fields for which the products are being utilized.
The Library Web site contains links to a MICROMEDEX Training Module and a MICROMEDEX Tutorial. Find MICROMEDEX and these learning aids on the Library Web site by typing “MICROMEDEX” in the search box.
Questions about MICROMEDEX? Contact Emily Patridge by email or by phone at 214-645-6065.

The Library is everywhere you are: Individualized and group training available

The Library is more than a campus building. Your Library staff is available to you for consultations and training at your workplace. We can come to your office, conference room, or laboratory at a time that best meets your needs.
Our experts can:

  • Help identify key resources in your field
  • Give tips to enhance database searching skills
  • Recommend Library services that can speed up your research
  • Explain how to manage bibliographies with EndNote
  • Show how to create automatic subject or table-of-contents alerts
  • And more

Group training sessions can also be arranged. We are happy to speak to departmental meetings or other groups on a topic of interest.
This service is available to faculty, staff, and students of UT Southwestern Medical Center (including the University Hospitals), Parkland Health and Hospital System, and Children’s Medical Center.
To request a training session, fill out the Individualized Training Request form, which is available under “Get Help/Ask Us” (on the left sidebar) on the Library Web site. Or you may call 214.648.2003 and leave a message with your specific needs and contact information.

InterLibrary Loan request page updated

The InterLibrary Loan Request page on the Library Web site has been updated.
Examples of new features include the following:

  • Users can change their own passwords.
  • All actions can be requested from one page.
  • “Return to Library Home Page” is available from every page.

If you have comments or questions on the new form, contact Donna Terlisner by email or by phone at 214-648-9472.

UpToDate® clinical information source offers new features

UpToDate® is a comprehensive, clinically-oriented information resource, designed to give practical answers to clinicians at the point of care. UpToDate® recently released a new version with additional features:

  • “UpToDate in Neurology” is now available.
  • You can easily sort by adult or pediatric relevance.
  • “What’s New” provides a summary of updates by speciality since the last release.
  • “UpToDate for Patients” offers hundreds of current topical summaries for patients across 27 health categories. Patients can be referred to the free public Web site at www.uptodate.com/patients.
  • Free patient education pads and posters can be ordered at www.uptodate.com/patients/email171.

UpToDate® topic reviews are written by clinicians for clinicians and are continually updated. Information is geared toward internal medicine and selected subspecialty practitioners. The content provides specific, practical recommendations for diagnosis and treatment; is comprehensive yet concise; and is fully referenced. The content also goes through an extensive peer review process to ensure that the information and recommendations are accurate and reliable.

Due to licensing restrictions, UpToDate® is available from on-campus or from the UT Southwestern University Hospitals only; it cannot be accessed from outside the UT Southwestern campus and University Hospitals, and VPN/EZProxy access is not allowed. UT Southwestern users who wish to use the Library-licensed UpToDate® must access it from within the Library or on another computer on the UT Southwestern campus network. Due to technical issues, on-campus wireless access is not available.

A list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) about UpToDate® is found on the Library’s Tutorials/Support page. Connect to UpToDate® on the Library Web site by using the “Quick Links” drop down menu.

History of campus in photographs: Now on Library Web site

Photos illustrating the evolution of the campus from 1943 to the present can be viewed in a Web exhibit linked from the Library Web site under “Highlights.” The exhibit includes 21 photos, beginning with an aerial view of the campus in 1952 when it was located on Oak Lawn Avenue near the intersection of Maple Avenue. Also from the 1950s is a photo showing the present South Campus before any buildings were on the site. The exhibit ends with a recent aerial view showing the entire campus area in 2008.
Most photos in the exhibit come from the Library’s UT Southwestern Archives collection. Photos in the Archives span the years from 1943 (when the medical school was founded) to the 1970s. Anyone with an interest in the history of UT Southwestern and its people is welcome to use the Archives, which also contain extensive holdings of publications by and about UT Southwestern, such as:

  • Medical school yearbooks (1944 to the present, with some gaps)
  • Faculty & Administration Photo Directories (1971 to 2007)
  • Campus phone directories (1943 to 2001/2002)
  • The Center Times and its predecessor publications
  • Books about the history of UT Southwestern

The Archives of St. Paul Hospital (now University Hospital – St. Paul), from its founding in the 1890s up through the recent past, have also been incorporated into the UT Southwestern Archives.
For more information about the Archives, visit the Archives page of the Library Web site, or contact Bill Maina, Archivist, by email or by phone at 214-648-2629. If you have UT Southwestern-related papers or photos that you would consider donating to the Archives, please contact Bill as well. The Library is actively adding material to the Archives.