Tuesday, December 29, 2009

DynaMed is going away


Unfortunately, due to budget constraints and low user numbers, the Library will not be renewing DynaMed for 2010. Many of you found this to be a useful tool that you could use from anywhere, but at $9350.00 per year, it was not sustainable. Please feel free to call the Library if you need clinical information--the hospital has onsite access to UptoDate, a similar point of care tool, and I am always glad to send copies of topics as needed, or other resources.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Resources for Helping Patients with Obesity

Yale's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity offers several resources for communicating with patients about obesity without harming.

Toolkit for Preventing Weight Bias: Helping without Harming in Clinical Practice

AMA's Primer for Physicians on Assessment and Management of Adult Obesity

Handouts:

Featured Library Book: Difficult Conversations in Medicine

Difficult Conversations in Medicine, edited by Elisabeth Macdonald, is a collection of essays about effective communication between health care professionals, patients, and families. Topics range from legal and ethical issues, to planning for such conversations, apologies, strong emotions and cross-cultural issues. Dr. Macdonald is a Consultant Clinical Oncologist from London, and writes in the context of the NHS and , and mostly from the point of view of physicians but will also be useful to other healthcare professionals. Finally, there is an appendix of transcriptions of illustrative conversations in order to see how others have approached them. A review of this book is available in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. You can find this book on the shelves at the library at W 62 D569 2004.

Related:
Cecil Textbook of Medicine
A Practical Guide to Palliative Care
Medical Management of Vulnerable and Underserved Patients

Friday, December 11, 2009

Searching for Articles with PubMed


The gold standard database of medical journal abstracts is PubMed/Medline, a service of the US National Library of Medicine, which indexes 5300+ biomedical journals.

Frequently Asked Questions:
Is there a fee for using PubMed?
You can get to PubMed from any computer at any location free of charge, because it is a public database.

Is there a username and password?
Just go to http://pubmed.gov/. That's it, no username or password required.

Are there actual full text articles in PubMed?
Yes, there are some free full text articles available. Some are provided by the journal publishers, and others are from PubMed Central(PMC), the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) free digital archive of biomedical and life sciences journal literature. Here is a list of the PMC Journals.
How do I find the free full text articles?
After entering your topic, a link on the right hand side of the screen will alert you to the number of free full text articles. Screen shots of PubMed.

Why can't I get to the article I want?
If there is a link to full text, but you get the dreaded "you are attempting to access restricted content" message, or a screen asking for a username and password or the link is no longer valid, and you still want the article, you will need to provide a credit card number for "pay per view" to the publisher.

Can I search just nursing journal articles?
Go to Advanced Search, and scroll down to Limit by Topics, Languages and Journal Groups, and under subsets choose "Nursing Journals."

PubMed doesn't look the same. What happened?
PubMed was redesigned with a new interface in November 2009.

Where do I find more information?

PubMed Redesign from NLM Technical Bulletin
PubMed Ten Tips from UNC-Chapel Hill

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