Hardin News

NIH seeks comments on the NIH Common Fund

April 25th, 2008 by Chris Shaffer

The National Institutes of Health on Tuesday published a Request for Information, seeking input from the scientific community, health professionals, patient advocates, and the general public about innovative and cross-cutting initiatives to be funded through the NIH Common Fund. The NIH Common Fund was created by the NIH in 2004 and enacted into law by Congress through the 2006 NIH Reform Act to support cross-cutting, trans-NIH programs.

The deadline for comments is June 2nd.

Hardin MD serves Iowa & the World

April 22nd, 2008 by Eric Rumsey

See Flickr pictures of 21 pages linking to Hardin MD in Iowa

… and 50+ countries around the world - Canada, UK, China, Spain, Turkey …

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[medical information, medical sites, medical websites, health info, hardinmd]

RefWorks Class @ Hardin

April 22nd, 2008 by Mary Cullen

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On Thursday, May 1, Charisse Madlock-Brown will be teaching a class on how to use the online management tool RefWorks.

RefWorks is a web-based citation management and bibliography tool. It can help you to efficiently store, organize, and share citations and easily format them for papers and bibliographies.

It is also compatible with other databases and EndNote users can easily export their citation databases directly into RefWorks.

The workshop will be held at 3pm in the Info Commons East Room of the Hardin Library for the Health Sciences.

To register for the class, go online to:
http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/find/refworks/workshops.html

This is National Library Week- enjoy a video

April 17th, 2008 by Sarah Andrews

Academic libraries answer over 70 million reference questions every year.   This video will give you an idea what it is like to work at a reference desk.

Clinical Education position available

April 17th, 2008 by Janna Lawrence

For more information, please review the complete job announcement.

Reporting to the Assistant Director for Collections and Outreach, the Clinical Education Librarian plans, promotes and provides information services that support the needs of residents and, to a lesser degree, faculty, researchers, staff and students, of the Carver College of Medicine and the affiliated hospital.
• As liaison to academic and clinical units, cultivates relationships with residents and faculty to identify opportunities for library partnerships with education and health care programs.
• Develops and teaches tailored library education sessions. Coordinates education services for liaison units. Works with faculty to integrate library education into the curriculum.
• In support of research and education, assists patrons with research and information management tools and skills through individual and small group consultations. Coordinates consultation services for liaison units.
• Partners with other librarians to market library services and promote increased awareness of scholarly communication issues on the health campus.
• Provides information and circulation services at the public service desk in-person and via telephone, email and instant messenger.
• Investigates new technologies and works with others to develop and revise programs to respond to the changing information needs of members of the health campus.
• Works with other Hardin Library staff members on public services projects for the health campus and health professionals and consumers in the State of Iowa.
• Serves on Hardin Library, University Libraries, health colleges, university and hospital committees and working groups.
• Contributes to and learns from the profession through such avenues as local, state and national professional organizations and publications.

Don’t forget to check out new 3rd Floor Display!

April 16th, 2008 by Mary Cullen

FacsimileDon’t forget to stop by Hardin’s newest exhibit, Simple Medicines, located near the 3rd floor doors of the Hardin Library. The display on herbs and herbal medicinal treatments spotlights the work of French scholar Matthaeus Platearius (d. 1161).

The lustrous images in this exhibit have been copied from a facsimile of a remarkable manuscript published in the last part of the 15th century, Le livre des simples médecines (The book of simple medicines). The original manuscript is housed in the Russian National Library at St. Petersburg [Barcelona: M. Moleiro, 2000].

Beginning around the 11th century, European scholars began translations of ancient Greek works, using as their sources, Arabic translations that were preserved during the Middle Ages by Islamic scholars. One of the most important of these translations (De medicinis simplicibus (“On simple medicines”) was completed in the mid 12th century by Matthaeus Platearius (d. 1161), a physician from Salerno, Italy, an important translation center.

Platearius’ text found its way into numerous manuscripts but none as beautiful as the codex produced for Count Charles of Angoulême and his wife Louise of Savoy. Most of the text is taken from Platearius’ French translation with additional material from later writers. The text includes sections on herbs and flowers, trees, metals & minerals, and animal products. It is followed by a magnificent 116 page atlas depicting “simples” – plants used in treating diseases. The striking artistry was probably the work of Robinet Testard (fl 1475–1523), the French illustrator and illuminator.

Of interest, too, are the written annotations added by two physicians who insert Latin and Greek names for many of the plants and who provide additional commentary.

History of Medicine Society to Host Annual Banquet, Friday, April 25

April 7th, 2008 by Ed Holtum

The University of Iowa History of Medicine Society will host its annual R. Palmer Howard Dinner, Friday, April 25, 2008. The reception will begin at 6:00 pm followed by the dinner at 7:00 on the 8th floor, Roy Carver Pavilion, UIHC.
The after-dinner speaker will be, Walton O. Schalick, III, Md, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medical History, University of Wisconsin-Madison who will speak on ‘Humanizing’ Disability Care: Pediatrics, Policy and Crippled Children in the US and Europe, 1802-1945. The event is open to the public. Please click here for a reservation form.

Dr. Schalick’s research interests include medieval medicine and pharmacology, the history of children with physical disability in 19th and 20th century Europe and the US, and the practical ethics of pediatric emergency research. His is in great demand as a lecturer and has delivered presentations on four continents. Dr. Schalick is also the recipient of numerous honors, including the William b. Bean Award from the American Osler Society. After completing his undergraduate work at Washington University in St. Louis, Dr. Schalick received his PHD and his MD from Johns Hopkins University.

Hardin does Good

April 4th, 2008 by Eric Rumsey

We recently found these kind words about Hardin Library and Hardin MD in Google Book search, in the book Health information on the Internet, by Rowena Cullen (Univ of Wellington, New Zealand).

Medical Libraries with a Public Good Focus — There are a number of medical school libraries that consciously fill a public good role. The Hardin Library for the Health Sciences at the University of Iowa has a very extensive site, Hardin MD (http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/hardin/md/index.html). The site is well maintained, and it links to some key resources in Spanish, medical illustrations, and hundreds of other medical library sites throughout the world.”

Here’s a Flickr picture of the citation and the page in Google Book search.

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[medical information, medical sites, medical websites, health info, hardinmd, medical pictures, common good, google books, google book search, medical libraries]

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