Get a leg up on your classmates and check out www.getbodysmart.com. Created by an anatomy teacher, this website is a great resource for learning about the skeletal system, muscle tissue physiology and the nervous system among other subjects. The animated drawings, diagrams and interactive quizzes will help you ace your next exam.
The Libraries’ News Blog will be one year old tomorrow. And this post will be number 194 which adds up to a post about every 2 days. The bloggers have strived to find interesting and pertinent information for the LSUHSC community. Please let us know if there is something you would like to see more of. We’ll see you in year 2, next week.
Today is Tennessee Williams birthday. Unlikely as it seems, one of Louisiana’s greatest playwrights appears seven times in a search for “Tennessee Williams” in PubMed! Check out the articles here, and if you’re in New Orleans this weekend, check out the Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival’s annual STELLA! Shouting contest this Sunday in Jackson Square.
Here’s nifty tool that can help you stay current on medical news and topics. MedWorm is a web-based program that takes thousands of RSS feeds from medical journals, websites, blogs, and more, and sorts them into categories so you can quickly get up to date news on the topic of your choice.
Whether you want to know the latest on Alzeheimers or need to stay up to date with consumer health news, MedWorm wriggles its way through the internet to bring you a comprehensive and current snapshot. You can even subscribe to it through your RSS reader. Now that’s a parasite I don’t mind having on my computer.
LINKS:
MedWorm: http://www.medworm.com/
Good luck everyone!
National Resident Matching Program: http://www.nrmp.org/
Dr. Charles Brown, a medical doctor and professor in the school of Public Health, was featured in the Gambit Weekly’s “Bouquets & Brickbats” column this week. He has been presented with the 2007 St. George National Award, the highest honor the American Cancer Society gives to volunteers, for his work with ?óÔé¼?ôCoalition for Tobacco Free Louisiana?óÔé¼?Ø.
Congrats Dr Brown!
The Library will be open regular hours today and tomorrow (Wednesday, March 19th & Thursday, March 20th from 8 a.m. until 12 midnight) and will be closed on Friday, March 21st, Saturday, March 22nd, and Sunday, March 23rd.
Are you the new owner of a shiny new iPhone or other handheld device? Before you chuck your old phone or PDA in the garbage consider Palm’s Take Back and Recycling Program.
The Palm Take Back and Recycling Program strives to keep Palm Handhelds and Treo smartphones out of landfills- and they gladly take other companies’ devices and all related accessories.
Just place your handhelds, mobile phones and related accessories (chargers, headsets, memory cards) into a box large enough for you to safely send in all your retired mobile devices, apply the postage-paid mailing label, and put it in a mailbox or bring it to the post office. It’s free and a great way to reduce your carbon footprint.
LINK TO: Palm site & postage free mailing label
From the Institute for Advanced Biosciences, Keio University, Japan comes GENOME PROJECTOR, an awesome new tool for those interested in molecular biology.
Genome Projector, a searchable database browser with zoomable user interface, currently allows 4 different views: Genome map, Plasmid map, Pathway map, and DNA walk. It’s based on the same software concepts that run Google Maps, so the interface is pretty intuitive.
Check it out:
Genome Projector
The National Library of Medicine and the Office of Research on Women’s Health announced a new web resource yesterday. Women’s Health Resources aims to be a one-stop location for “consumers, health care providers, and researchers will be able to more quickly access the latest information available on scientific developments for important issues related to women.”
Curious as to where politicians and political candidates stand on science issues?
The SHARP Network is the first website that tracks where elected officials and candidates stand on science. SHARP, which stands for Science, Health, and Related Policies, currently provides over 600 pages of information on presidential candidates, senators, representatives, and important issues such as stem cell research, science education, and global warming. Simply enter your zip code to find out where your representatives stand on science issues.
The SHARP Network is a project from SEA: Scientists & Engineers for America, a non-profit nonpartisan educational organization with 501(c)(3) status. SEA’s mission is to renew respect for evidence-based debate and decision-making in politics and at all levels of government.
Stumped by the enormous retrieval you’ve found in Pubmed?
Or the fact that you couldn’t find a single citation on your topic in CINAHL Plus?
Who is there to help? Call a Reference Librarian! Or email one at either Isché or Dental.
Reference Librarians offer the following services:
Mediated Searching
Classroom Instruction
Consultations
Get some help today!
Two new displays are available in the Isché Library.
The first highlights Refworks. |
![refworksdisplay Library Refworks Display](https://www.lsuhsc.edu/library/news/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/refworksdisplay-300x192.jpg) Library Refworks Display |
The second highlights PDA resources available without cost (FREE!) to LSUHSC – New Orleans users. |
![pdadisplay Library PDA Resources Display](https://www.lsuhsc.edu/library/news/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/pdadisplay-300x152.jpg) Library PDA Resources Display |
In case you missed Chancellor Hollier’s email today, LSUHSC-New Orleans has a new emergency alert service. LSUHSC Users can opt for email or text notifications, or both. “Participation is not mandatory, but is encouraged.”
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health has issued the first clinical guidelines in the United States for the diagnosis and management of von Willebrand Disease (VWD), the most common inherited bleeding disorder.Typically milder but more common than another bleeding disorder, hemophilia, VWD affects 1 out of every 100 to 1,000 people – both males and females.
The guidelines include recommendations on screening, diagnosis, disease management, and directions for future research. An extensive article on the guidelines is available for free in the March 08 issue of the journal Haemophilia.
?óÔé¼?ôThese are the first guidelines on von Willebrand Disease published in the United States and we are pleased to offer clinicians science-based recommendations in the evaluation and treatment of patients,?óÔé¼?Ø said NHLBI Director Elizabeth G. Nabel, M.D. ?óÔé¼?ôThe disease can be difficult to diagnose, especially in women of child-bearing age and in children, and the danger of excessive bleeding is often under-recognized.?óÔé¼?Ø
Read the Full Report from the NHLBI
Pocket Guidelines from the NHLBI