HS/HSL Website Changes Coming – Tell Us What You Think

The HS/HSL website’s navigation and organization are being refreshed to improve the user experience, and we want to know what you think about the proposed changes. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are unable to continue the in-person usability study so it has been moved to the web. We are now looking for volunteers (UMB faculty, staff, and students) to participate.  It requires a one-hour time commitment and will be performed using WebEx.

We’re asking volunteers to perform several tasks and share their thoughts as they locate information related to the tasks. Screen activity and the participant’s voice will be recorded. Afterward, volunteers will be asked to share their overall impressions of the website. The study runs from June 22 – July 17.

To participate in the remote usability study, contact Patricia Hinegardner, Associate Director for Resources at phinegar@hshsl.umaryland.edu.

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HS/HSL seeks COVID-19 Stories and Experiences from UMB Community

In an effort to capture the UMB Community’s experiences during the current pandemic for future researchers Historical Collections in the Health Sciences and Human Services Library has launched a project: UnMasking a Pandemic: Stories from UMB during COVID-19.  The project aims to collect stories, photographs, blogs, videos, etc. from across the UMB Community about the COVID-19 Pandemic.  Members of the campus community at all levels (staff, faculty, students, etc.) are encouraged to participate in this project.  The HS/HSL is interested in receiving items of personal reflection, creative work, or anything that documents your thoughts, emotions, and experiences during this incredible time.

We are accepting:

  • journal entries
  • personal essays
  • poems, short stories, etc.
  • photographs (or other visual art pieces)
  • music or other audio recordings
  • videos
  • screenshots of personal websites, blogs, or social media post

To participate please see the Project’s Website and fill out the Survey to submit any items.  If you have any questions or would like to submit physical items to our collections please contact, Tara Wink, Historical Collections Librarian and Archivist. 

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NIH “All of Us” Research Program Begins Beta Testing of Data Platform: Researchers Invited to Give Feedback

National Institute's of Health All Of Us Research Program

In partnership with our participants—now nearly 350,000 and counting—we’re working to build one of the world’s largest and most diverse datasets to advance health research. Today, we’re happy to announce that we’ve opened our research platform, the All of Us Researcher Workbench, for beta testing. Now, researchers can begin using our initial dataset and tools in studies and tell us what’s working and what we can improve. This moment is an important step in our effort to accelerate new discoveries. 

View the full NIH announcement here.

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Virtual Library Resources & Services Over the Summer

zinnias

Virtual HS/HSL services and resources will remain unchanged during the Library’s Summer Session, which runs from Tuesday, May 26 – Sunday, August 16.  The one exception is that there will be no Reference Service on Sundays beginning May 31.  

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Reference Service is Closed for the Memorial Day Holiday, May 23, 24, 25

flags with text Memorial Day, Celebrate, Honor, Remember

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Include Your Data in the UMB Data Catalog!

Do you have a dataset you’ve been meaning to share, but just haven’t gotten around to it? Now is a perfect time!

Results of a recent survey on how life scientists have adapted to COVID-19 restrictions indicate that 43% of respondents are spending more time on data analysis.


Figure taken from Korbel and Stegle (2020).

The task may seem daunting, but we at the HS/HSL are here to help! Contact us if you want to talk about:

Finding the right repository: There is an ever-increasing number of options out there for sharing and storing data. We can help you sort through these options, and find an appropriate fit for your data that takes into account funding or publisher requirements, discipline, size, privacy requirements, data type and more!

Creating documentation for your data: Don’t send your data out into the wild without a good description. We can help you craft a README file or data dictionary to add context to your dataset. Well-described data is happy data!

Listing your data in the UMB Data Catalog: The UMB Data Catalog is a resource that aims to facilitate the discovery of datasets created by or used by UMB researchers. The catalog is not a repository to store datasets; it describes them. By having a record for your dataset in the Data Catalog, you can increase the visibility of your research on campus and beyond. Datasets are discoverable through a search in the UMB Data Catalog, Google’s Dataset Search (beta) and Google. Use the link to your dataset record in articles, CVs, and your web profile.

Read more about Bioinformation and Data Services at the HS/HSL.

Request a consultation or submit your dataset to the Data Catalog.

References

Korbel, J.O., Stegle, O. Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on life scientists. Genome Biol 21, 113 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-020-02031-1

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Celebrate the end of the academic year with a gift from the HS/HSL!

Image of the "Hundred-Leaved Rose" partially colored

Rosa Centifolia or the Hundred-Leaved Rose from William Woodville’s “Medical Botany”.

It’s the end of the semester, during a global pandemic, things are stressful for everyone, everywhere!  We at the HS/HSL hope this delightful coloring book of charming botanical images from our Historical Collections will help to ease stress and anxiety.  Images in the coloring book are scanned from William Woodville’s “Medical Botany” and William Withering’s “An Account of the Foxglove,” a gift from Dr. Mordecai and Ellen Blaustein.    We invite you to download, print, and color your worries away! 

We miss you all, so please share your masterpieces with us on Social Media (Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram). 

Link to the coloring book: https://www2.hshsl.umaryland.edu/HSHSLDigitalColoringBook.pdf

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Baltimore Sun Wins Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting: How Do I Read it Online?

Photo: Baltimore Sun: Light for All, by Brent Payne, licensed under CC BY-SA

The Library is often asked about how to read newspapers like the Baltimore Sun, New York Times, and Washington Post online. It’s simple, search our database list for National Newspapers Core & Baltimore Sun.

One important caveat to note is that articles published digitally must be indexed before they appear in the newspaper database, so they may not be available until the following day.

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Recognizing Nurses with a historic poem this National Nurses Week

The Health Sciences and Human Services Library Historical Collections’ strives to provide broad access to our diverse collections both in person and digitally. Materials in our collections appear as they originally were published or created and may contain offensive or inappropriate language or images and may be offensive to users. The University of Maryland, Baltimore does not endorse the views expressed in these materials. Materials should be viewed in the context in which they were created.

As COVID-19 confines thousands to hospitals around the country, nurses are in high demand.  The UMB School of Nursing has answered this call by offering qualifying May 2020 graduates an “early exit” opportunity. The early exit was announced April 27, 2020 and allows newly minted BSN and CNL nurses to join the workforce and help fight COVID-19 in local Baltimore hospitals.  While it may not be the commencement celebration these nurses had in mind when they started their education, many are answering the call and jumping headfirst into the COVID-19 fight. 

Gentle Nurses Poem from the 1905 Yearbook

“Gentle Nurses” poem in the 1905 Bones, Molars, and Briefs Yearbook.

In the midst of this global pandemic falls National Nurses Week, May 6 to 12, 2020.  During this monumental time the HS/HSL wishes to show our thanks to our UMB nurses past and present with a fitting poem from the 1905 Bones, Molars, and Briefs Yearbook.  We know nurses on the front lines of this illness are all experiencing “endless, sleepless nights,” soothing your “fever racked” patients through “fitful dreams” and “throbbing brain”, and blissfully cheering on all those lucky enough to have “health and strength return.”  For so many patients today, you are their sole cheerleader and adopted loved one, so for “as long as gratitude shall live,” we thank you.

The “Gentle Nurses” poem was featured in the 1905 Bones, Molars, and Briefs Yearbook.  The Yearbook was curated by students of the Schools of Medicine, Dentistry, Law, and Pharmacy.  Some early yearbooks also featured the graduating classes of the University Hospital Nurses Training School, a predecessor of today’s School of Nursing; however, the 1905 Yearbook includes no mention or photograph of the students in this school, only the Gentle Nurses poem hints at the nurses training in the same hospital as medical students and faculty.  Early yearbooks commonly featured the poetry, literature, satire, and art pieces of students at the University and provide excellent glimpses into the culture of the time period.  Please view the content in the UMB yearbooks and shared in this Blog within this light. 

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Digital Jigsaw Puzzles From the HS/HSL Historical Collections

Library Puzzle in progress; photograph is of the Health Sciences and Human Services Library at night.

Screen capture of one of the Puzzles available in the HS/HSL virtual puzzle collection.

According to articles by NPR and the Washington Post, jigsaw puzzles are in high demand and almost impossible to find right now.  Try to order a puzzle from Ravensberger, the world’s largest creator of jigsaw puzzles, right now and you’ll get the following message, “Due to unexpected demand, we are unable to fulfill orders at this time.”  Retail stores cannot get them in stock or keep them stocked. The HS/HSL has good news and we can help with this shortage!  We have selected images from our very own historical collections and turned them into virtual puzzles for free!  There are puzzles for a variety of interest: botanicals, animals, sports, campus buildings, etc.  Because these puzzles are online, you can choose the difficulty and the puzzle shape and even challenge friends and family anywhere to see who can complete the puzzle in the shortest time.

Davidge Hall Puzzle in Progress; Puzzle is a sketch of Davidge Hall, the oldest building on the University of Maryland, Baltimore's Campus.

Screen capture of the Davidge Hall Puzzle in progress from the HS/HSL’s virtual puzzle collection.

Interested in learning about any of the images found in these puzzles?  Contact the Historical Collections Librarian and Archivist for more information. 

Link to the HSHSL Puzzles: https://www.jigsawplanet.com/winkta01/university-of-maryland-baltimore

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