Monday, July 25, 2005
Welcome to the Virtual Medical Library e-Newsletter.
The purpose of this newsletter is to announce new
resources added to the FSU Virtual Medical Library, to
feature established online resources to acquaint
students and faculty with these resources, mention a
cool feature of some PDA resource, and remind everyone
how to access our Library resources from off campus.
Featured this month are
Clinical Evidence for the PDA
and
The Beginners' Guide to the Library.
The newsletter archives are available on the web at:
http://med.fsu.edu/library/LibraryHandout_00.html
Library Announcements
WebFeat has been re-designed
WebFeat search engine for e-books
WebFeat, our search engine for our e-books, has been improved.
It has a new look, and it is working more reliably with EZproxy authentication for off-campus users.
We are working with the vendor to get NetLibrary working properly and to resolve some minor appearance-related issues.
Try searching for a topic in two hundred ebooks, and then linking directly from a list of the results to the relevant content of the books!
Beginner's Guide has been updated.
The online library orientation powerpoint slideshow has been updated to reflect changes the library resources
have made during the last year. Our vendors have improved both the appearance and the functions of our
resources. See the feature below.
Copying and borrowing print library materials at Dirac, Strozier and other FSU libraries
Although the vast majority of Maguire Medical Library resources are electronic,
there may be times when you need to go to the Dirac Science Library or other FSU libraries for print resources.
Borrowing print books and bound journals from other FSU libraries
Your research assistant or another designated person may check out books and bound journals on your behalf.
By completing an authorization form at found at
http://www.lib.fsu.edu/pdfs/forms/authorizations.pdf
and giving your FSU card to your assistant,
he/she may then go to Dirac, Strozier or other library on campus
and check out books and bound journals under your name.
Your assistant/designated person needs to present his/her FSU card,
as well as your FSU card, at the time of check-out.
Copy cards for photocopying print journal articles
There may be times when you need to make photocopies at other University Libraries on campus.
The most cost-effective way is to purchase a copy card in advance and keep it on file in your office.
Complete an interdepartmental requisition form for the amount you want to charge on your card
and take it to the university copy service located next to the university bookstore.
We recommend purchasing a couple of cards valued at $20-$25 each vs. placing large amounts on a single card.
Featured PDA Resources - Clinical Evidence Tool
Clinical Evidence is a highly respected, evidence-based medicine tool online,
published by the British Medical Journal.
It now includes a new PDA tool that is available to FSU students and faculty.
Instructions for downloading and installing it are at
http://www.med.fsu.edu/library/PDADocuments.asp.
It summarizes the current state of knowledge and uncertainty about the prevention
and treatment of 200 clinical conditions, based on systematic review and appraisal of the literature,
randomized clinical trials, and observational studies where appropriate. If there is
no good evidence, it says so.
Recommendations are summarized into the following categories:
- Beneficial
- Likely to be beneficial
- Trade off between benefits and harms
- Unknown effectiveness
- Unlikely to be beneficial
- Likely to be ineffective or harmful
Here is a search for information on migraine headache:
The navigation bar at the bottom of the screen has a Back button that takes you to the previous screen.
This is equivalent to closing the current window.
The Home button closes all windows and takes you to the opening screen.
There is also a button that will take you to the Index.
Search does a Medline Search the next time you sync.
Link to Beginners' Guide on Library Home Page
Whether you are a new user of the library or just want to jog your memory about one of the online resources,
the Beginner's Guide is a useful document.
The link is conveniently located on the garnet-colored navigation bar
that appears on most of the library web pages - it is called "For New Users."
Beginner's Guide
The guide gives tips for beginners on several topics, including how to use:
- the Library Website to find information resources.
- PubMed to locate and link to journal articles.
- Ovid for MEDLINE searching.
- MDConsult to find information in books and journals.
- FirstConsult for disease discriptions and differential diagnosis.
- InfoRetriever for evidence-based decision support.
Example slides from the Beginner's Guide
These resources add new features often. Take a few minutes to
see what's new in our virtual library.