Tech Brown Bag at HS/HSL: 3D Printing in Health Sciences

makerbot-replicator

Technology Brown Bag Forum at the Health Sciences & Human Services Library: 3D printing in health sciences, with special guest Dr. Gene Shirokobrod

3D printing in health sciences is becoming more and more common. Prosthetic limbs, drugs, and medical models are just a few of the uses and innovations. Join us for our next Technology Brown Bag as we explore 3D printing use cases connected to the UMB community. We will hear from special guest, Dr. Gene Shirokobrod, a faculty member from the UMB School of Medicine who co-founded a local company that produces a 3D printed physical therapy device, arc, for postural support.

Thursday, October 29, 2015
Health Sciences & Human Services Library
Distance Ed Room
Noon to 12:45p

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Tech Brown Bag at HS/HSL – 3D Printing in Health Sciences

makerbot-replicator

Technology Brown Bag Forum at the Health Sciences & Human Services Library: 3D printing in health sciences, with special guest Dr. Gene Shirokobrod

3D printing in health sciences is becoming more and more common. Prosthetic limbs, drugs, and medical models are just a few of the uses and innovations. Join us for our next Technology Brown Bag as we explore 3D printing use cases connected to the UMB community. We will hear from special guest, Dr. Gene Shirokobrod, a faculty member from the UMB School of Medicine who co-founded a local company that produces a 3D printed physical therapy device, arc, for postural support.

Thursday, October 29, 2015
Health Sciences & Human Services Library
Distance Ed Room
Noon to 12:45p

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HS/HSL Donates Computers to Community

The HS/HSL recently updated the PCs and the monitors in its three library classrooms. Some of PCs and monitors that were removed were donated to Vivien T. Thomas Medical Arts Academy (VTTMAA). VTTMAA provides an academic program that encourages students to enter careers in health. The rest of the equipment will be given to the Office for Community Engagement at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. The Office for Community Engagement will use them to assist the Baltimore community at its UMB Community Engagement Center soon to be located at the BioPark on North Poppleton St.

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Public Access Compliance – HS/HSL Can Help

In February 2013, The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy issued a memorandum to all agency and department heads directing federal agencies with more than $100 million in annual research and development spending to establish plans for increasing public access to peer-reviewed scientific publications and digital data resulting from federally funded research.

Following the NIH Public Access Policy’s lead, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, will now require authors of peer-reviewed journal articles arising from agency funding to be deposited into a central repository using the NIH Manuscript Submission System. All articles must be electronically accessible to the public within 12 months of publication. For the CDC, the policy applies to all manuscripts published after July 15, 2013. For AHRQ, publications from research funded from February 2015 onward must be submitted. Beginning October 2015, digital data arising from these funding agencies must also have a data management plan available.

Faculty librarians at the HS/HSL can assist researchers in determining their compliance status and provide support in taking steps to deposit federally funded research articles into the central repository. Please visit our website for detailed instructions on the process or contact us at nihcompliance@hshsl.umaryland.edu.

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The Library Genie is Back! What Are Your 3 Library Wishes?

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The Library Genie is back! Last year he asked for your 3 library wishes and you responded. We can happily say that 3 library wishes were granted.

  1. You asked for early morning hours. HS/HSL is now open at 6:00AM Monday-Friday!
  2. You asked for later hours on Saturday and earlier hours on Sunday. HS/HSL now closes at 8:00PM on Saturdays and opens at 8:00AM on Sundays!
  3. You asked for more large monitors in the study rooms. We installed 5 more monitors!

The Library Genie will be accepting wishes from October 1 to 31.

  • Are there any new technologies you would like to see the Library offer?
  • What about resources and services the Library could provide?
  • How could the Library better assist you with your research, education or clinical needs?

Now is your chance to let us know. Submit your 3 wishes to the Library Genie today! Your wishes will be anonymous, but if you’d be willing to talk more with us about your wishes you can include your name and e-mail address.

Thanks for your input and happy wishing!

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Community Health Maps Blog: A Resource for Low Cost Mapping Tools

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The National Library of Medicine has created the resource called “Community Health Maps: Information on Low Cost Mapping Tools for Community-based Organizations“. If you are interested in the usefulness of data mapping in public health, but have concerns about high cost or complex technology, check out this blog.

Community Health Maps contains a mixture of mapping apps and reviews, best practices, and experiences of folks who have successfully used mapping technologies in their work in public health. The blog is intended to help community organizations identify and apply low-cost and easy-to-use online mapping tools.

Examples of what you can find on the Community Health Maps blog include:

  • A guide for using iForm for Field Data Collection. iForm is an app that can be used on iPads, iPhones and Android devices. Using iForm and iFormBuilder, you can go to different locations, gather data, and view it in tabular or map format.
  • A review of CartoDB, an online cloud based platform for storing and visualizing spatial data.
  • A two-part article on the accuracy of the GPS in Smartphones. Will the use of your phone’s GPS be sufficient for your project?
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News Regarding MPowering the State Virtual Research Library

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MPowering the State was established a few years ago by the University System of Maryland Board of Regents to promote innovation and impact through collaboration between the University of Maryland, Baltimore and the University of Maryland, College Park. MPowering the State provided one-time funds, to be reviewed and renewed annually, for shared library collections supporting this collaboration. The University Libraries at College Park, and the Health Sciences and Human Services Library and the Thurgood Marshall Law Library at UM Baltimore employed these funds to establish the MPower Virtual Research Library, an interdisciplinary collection supporting advanced biosciences research and education between these universities.

As you know, The State of Maryland has recently faced significant financial challenges, which have affected every state entity, including the University System of Maryland. Funding for the MPower Virtual Research Library is one of the casualties. Fiscal year 2016 brings substantial reduction in support, and is the last year in which our libraries will receive MPower funding. The three library directors have informed their Provosts and the System that none of our libraries are able to fund these resources in the future due to flat or reduced collections budgets. We are looking at ways to collaboratively fund some of the resources but any funding there will necessitate hard decisions regarding reductions in other areas.

The MPower Virtual Research Library has substantially benefited the research and teaching of many faculty, students and librarians at our institutions.  It was an opportunity to develop a biosciences knowledge infrastructure supportive of collaboration across these major USM research institutions. Loss of access to these resources may have considerable negative impact.  Faculty, students and other researchers should consult with library faculty at their institutions to determine alternative resources.

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New Edition of Connective Issues

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Check out the latest edition of the HS/HSL’s newsletter, Connective Issues.

In this issue:

The Energy of a New Academic Year

New Information Services Desk

The Library Genie is Returning Oct. 1!

New Event – Technology Brown Bag

Helpful Hints for Students

News Regarding the MPowering the State Virtual Research Library

Public Access Compliance

Pictures of Nursing: The Zwerdling Postcard Collection

The Community Health Maps Blog: A Resource for Low Cost Mapping Tools

Open Wide: Recommended Oral Health Books for Children Booklist Now Available

Workshops at the HS/HSL

HS/HSL Donates Computers

HS/HSL Welcomes Emerging Technologies Librarian

Notable Tech Trends: Robots Have Arrived

Not Your Grandmother’s Library Video!

Staff News

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Helpful Hints for Students

Here are some helpful hints on how the HS/HSL can help you as the school year begins.

  • Want early access to the Library? From 6 a.m. to 8 a.m., Monday through Friday, you can enter the Library via the SMC Campus Center. Make sure to have your OneCard for identification. Library services begin at 8 a.m. when the front doors unlock.
  • The Library has four scanners that are free to use. Use them to scan book chapters or articles that you can save on a thumb drive or email to yourself. Scanners are located on the first floor of the HS/HSL.
  • Need assistance with research on a topic? Contact your school librarian to set up a research consultation.
  • Want a quiet place to study? The Library has study rooms on the 2nd through 5th floors. Some rooms can be reserved for up to three hours a day. All other rooms are available on a first-come-first-serve basis. Many rooms are equipped with digital displays that allow you to project content on your laptop.
  • Always bring your OneCard with you to the Library. Use it to print and check out books. The 14-digit barcode on the back of the card allows you log onto library computers.
  • The Library has a Presentation Practice Studio. Use this room to practice, record, and develop presentations, and to refine public speaking skills.
  • Want to learn about 3D Printing? Sign up for an orientation to the HS/HSL’sInnovation Space. Once you attend the orientation, you can use the space to work with 3D modeling software and print 3D objects.
  • Want to explore library resources? Sign up for a workshop or view librarytutorials.
  • Need help while in the Library? Contact the Information Services Desk. The staff is available to help you in person, via chat and email, or on the phone.
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Pictures of Nursing Exhibit and Free Luncheon/Lecture

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Pictures of Nursing: The Zwerdling Postcard Collection is on display in the Health Sciences and Human Services Library through October 10, 2015. The exhibition explores a unique archive of 2,588 postcards and over 100 years of images of nurses and the nursing profession from around the world, investigating the hold these images exert on the public imagination—then and now. Additional information about the display is available at the Library’s Weise Gallery webpage.

There will be a special luncheon and lecture followed by a tour of the exhibit. Guest speakers include Jiwon Kim and Dan Caughey, Exhibit Educators from the National Library of Medicine. The luncheon will be held on Wednesday, September 30 from 11:30 a.m. to1:00 p.m. in the Gladhill Boardroom. RSVP by emailing events@hshsl.umaryland.edu by September 25. Seating is limited.

This traveling exhibition was developed and produced by the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health. Curated by Julia Hallam, PhD.

Coordinating exhibit items located in the gallery were provided by the University of Maryland School of Nursing’s Living History Museum.

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