
The HSHSL will be closed May 28 – 30 for the Memorial Day weekend. We will return to our regular hours on Tuesday, May 31st.
601 West Lombard Street
Baltimore MD 21201-1512
Reference: 410-706-7996
Circulation: 410-706-7928
The HSHSL will be closed May 28 – 30 for the Memorial Day weekend. We will return to our regular hours on Tuesday, May 31st.
The HSHSL’s Historical Collections is home to the Pharmacy Historical Book Collection, which includes influential pharmacy and medical texts, dispensatories, pharmacopoeias, botanicals, and herbals from around the world dating from the seventeenth to twentieth centuries. Fatal Beauty, an exhibit in the HSHSL’s Weise Gallery, highlights stunning but deadly botanicals from the Pharmacy Collection.
Botanicals have been used since the first century B.C.E. to treat a variety of ailments; yet sometimes the most beautiful and helpful botanicals can also be the most dangerous, if used improperly. The Fatal Beauty exhibit highlights botanicals that, despite their traditional or modern medical benefits, can have dangerous consequences when used improperly. Admire with caution!
The exhibit runs May – August 2022.
The library building’s summer hours are:
May 19 – August 14
Monday – Thursday | 8:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. |
Friday – Saturday | 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. |
Sunday | Closed |
Exception to Regular Hours
You can reach out to us at hshsl@umaryland.edu.
The National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) invites you to join them on Wednesday, May 25, from 1-3 p.m. ET for a conversation on the complexities surrounding historical and present-day eugenics, scientific racism and ableism in the context of genetic and genomic screening and diagnostic technologies.
An internationally recognized group of experts have been assembled to help answer these questions and more. NHGRI will also answer select questions from registered audience members.
This event is free and open to the public. Sign language interpreting and CART services will be provided.
You can register here: https://nih.zoomgov.com/webinar/register/WN_ERdPQCJcTNqUJmA6WkDRTQ
The agenda for the event is available here: https://www.genome.gov/event-calendar/roundtable-discussion-does-genetic-and-genomic-screening-keep-open-the-door-to-eugenics
Questions? Contact: Jean-Paul Courneya, bioinformationist, and Amy Yarnell, data services librarian at data@hshsl.umaryland.edu.
The Center for Data and Bioinformation Services (CDABS) is the University of Maryland Health Sciences and Human Services Library hub for data and bioinformation learning, services, resources, and communication
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Last month we talked about the new NIH Policy for Data Management and Sharing. Yesterday, the NIH released related documentation which provides suggested language to include in informed consent documents regarding the storage and sharing of research data for future use. As we like to say here at CDABS, it’s best to plan for sharing your data from the very start of your research project. This is why it’s so important to have a data management and sharing plan.
Some notes about the guidance:
The guidance recommends addressing the following topics in consent documents:
Other resources:
Access the full guidance document here: https://osp.od.nih.gov/2022/05/12/nih-issues-new-resources-for-implementing-the-nih-policy-for-data-management-and-sharing-2/
Questions? Contact: Jean-Paul Courneya, bioinformationist, and Amy Yarnell, data services librarian at data@hshsl.umaryland.edu.
The Center for Data and Bioinformation Services (CDABS) is the University of Maryland Health Sciences and Human Services Library hub for data and bioinformation learning, services, resources, and communication
Sign up to get DABS delivered to your email or RSS feed.
Book it Forward, the Health Sciences and Human Services Library (HSHSL) Children’s Book Drive, has been going on for one month now. The UMB community has generously donated children and teens books for organizations in Baltimore. Book It Forward continues through the end of May.
Look for donation boxes at the HSHSL, at the Thurgood Marshall Law Library, the SMC Campus Center, the School of Dentistry, the School of Pharmacy, the Saratoga Building, and the BioPark.
As of April 18, 244 books have been collected from donation boxes around campus:
The books will be donated to two day care centers, one elementary/middle school, and two high schools in Baltimore. At this time, we need more books geared toward high school students. Please keep the teens especially in mind.
Many thanks to everyone who donated so far!
A special shout out to the Biopark’s Nora Finn, Director, UM BioPark Tenant Operations, Office of Research and Development, who created the exhibit below advertising our project.
Questions about the project? Contact bookdrive@hshsl.umaryland.edu
OSF, a project of the Center for Open Science, is a free and open source project management and collaboration tool that supports researchers throughout the research lifecycle. It’s a great way to organize and share resources with your team and others. It also integrates easily with a number of other commonly used tools, like Google Drive, Zotero, Mendeley, Figshare, and GitHub.
The University of Maryland, Baltimore is now an OSF Institution, which means you can log in to OSF with your UMID and password.
You will also be able to affiliate your public research with UMB on OSF and discover other affiliated research through our new UMB-OSF landing page. If your research is not yet public, now might be a good time to consider sharing your existing or future work. Conducting your research through UMB’s OSFI platform is a strategic way to enhance transparency, foster collaboration, and increase the visibility of your research.
For more information, you can view help guides on signing in with your institution and affiliating your projects.
Questions?
Contact: Amy Yarnell, data services librarian and Jean-Paul Courneya, bioinformationist, at data@hshsl.umaryland.edu.