New Exhibit – Scarred for Life: Every Scar Tells a Story

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A fascinating exhibit by artist Ted Meyer will be on display at the HS/HSL’s Weise Gallery from April 4 to June 22, 2018. Ted Meyer is a nationally recognized artist, curator, and patient advocate who helps patients, students, and medical professionals see the positive in the worst life can offer. Ted’s 18-year project “Scarred for Life: Mono-prints of Human Scars” chronicles the trauma and courage of people who have lived through accidents and health crises.

Ted seeks to improve patient-physician communications and speaks about living as an artist with illness. Telling stories about his own art and the stories behind his scar art collection, he offers insight into living with pain, illness, and disfigurement. Ted has been featured on NPR and in the New York TimesWashington PostChicago Tribune, and USA Today. His work has been displayed internationally in museums, hospitals, and galleries.

Ted’s rare niche mixes art, medicine, and stories of healing and survival, drawing from his experience as a lifelong patient with Gaucher Disease, an enzyme deficiency that affects bones and joints. Ted spent much of his childhood in severe pain. His work is influenced by his many hospital stays where he began mixing art and medical supplies. (How can you make something out of IV tubes, bandages, and pipe cleaners?) Contorted, graphic skeletal images appear in his early paintings, reflecting his belief that he would not reach his 30th birthday. He now considers himself normal and healthy, having outlived friends, family, and early expectations.

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Whiteboard Project: Preferred Study Environment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So, you like the sound of … SILENCE.  We do our best to keep the library a study friendly place: free earplugs, designated quiet floors, poster reminders, etc.  If a neighbor is being too loud, please don’t cry in a mirror, come to the Information Services desk and we will be happy to assist.

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Historical Highlights: Blaustein Donations

In December, the HS/HSL’s Historical Collections received a remarkable donation from Dr. Mordecai Blaustein. Dr. Blaustein, a long-time professor of physiology and medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, has been a strong supporter of the HS/HSL for many years.

The most recent additions are especially impressive and include a first edition of William Withering’s An Account of the Foxglove, and Some of its Medical Uses, a volume with special meaning to Dr. Blaustein. In the volume, Withering describes the ways in which foxglove can be used to cure or help certain medical ailments, including congestive heart failure. Dr. Blaustein’s own research centers around heart disease and hypertension. The Withering volume includes a beautiful hand-painted engraving of a foxglove.

The donation also included a second edition of G.B. Duchenne’s De L’electrisation Localisee et de son application a la Pathologie et a la Therapeutique, originally published in 1855. Duchenne introduced a form of non-invasive electrotherapy in this volume. Duchenne is well-known for describing muscular dystrophy, a condition that now bears his name (Duchenne muscular dystrophy).

Finally, the gift included a three-volume set by Richard Bright titled Reports of Medical Cases. These volumes include beautiful hand-painted engravings depicting the effect of disease on various organs. Bright is known for his research and work involving the kidneys, and for his description of Bright’s disease, a form of kidney disease now known as acute or chronic nephritis.

Previous donations from Dr. and Mrs. Blaustein include volumes dedicated to the memory of Dr. Blaustein’s father, Norman Blaustein, who was an avid book collector. Dr. Blaustein credits his father with inspiring him to start his own book collection, which, in addition to the donated volumes, contained a copy of Johannes Kepler’s 1609 Astonomia Nova, and a number of herbals. Among the Blausteins’ previous donations to the HS/HSL are monographs on European travel, human muscle, and anatomy.

In 1992, Dr. Blaustein donated an 1824 Maryland dissertation on measles. The dissertation was discovered by his book dealer in a European book store and made its way back to UMB through Dr. Blaustein. The dissertation is now available through the Library’s UMB Digital Archive:.

Dr. Blaustein joined the faculty at the UMB School of Medicine in 1979 as chair of the Department of Physiology, a position he held until 2003. After stepping down from the chairman position, he remained a member of the Department of Physiology and also served as director of the Maryland Center for Heart, Hypertension and Kidney Disease, and as an affiliate professor in the Biotechnology Center of the University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute.

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March Edition of Connective Issues Newsletter

 

 

 

 

 

Stay up to date with HS/HSL news!  In this issue:

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Library Closing at 3:00PM Due to Inclement Weather

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Due to the inclement weather, the UMB campus and HS/HSL library will be closing at 3:00PM on Tuesday, March 20th.  Please contact the UMB Campus Alerts page for information about campus opening times for Wednesday, March 21st before coming to the library.

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Intermittent Network Outage: 3/19, 2PM-6PM and 3/20, 11AM-3PM

UM network engineers have scheduled intermittent network outages for the following dates/times.  The following resources will be affected:  off-campus access to e-resources, access to the library catalog, the FindIt button in database results, and availability information in OneSearch.

Monday, March 19th 2:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Tuesday, March 20th 11:00 am – 3:00 pm
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Whiteboard Project: Do You Have Any Phobias?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yes, yes, you do.  Acrophobia (fear of heights) is the winner with 22 votes, followed closely by claustrophobia (fear of enclosed places) with 21 votes.  Just looking at some of these pics makes me shudder, and now I have a new phobia, Trypophobia (fear of holes).  Do not Google image search!

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Lombard Street Tree Work, March 8, 4am-Noon

Facilities has scheduled tree removal work on Lombard St for Thursday 3/8 – from 4am – Noon.  The sidewalk on Lombard will be closed from Greene St to Penn St.  Pedestrian access to the HS/HSL, Campus Center, and School of Nursing will be restricted to the footpath that runs from the HS/HSL to the SON.  Facilities has requested that a UMB alert be sent out to notify the students as well.

The landscaper will be installing replacement trees on Friday 3/9.  This is primarily hand work and should not close the entire sidewalk.

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Guest Speakers at the HS/HSL Maker Expo

Keynote @ 10am, Speakers Session @ 12:30pm

We’re pleased to present the HS/HSL Maker Expo to bring together health workers, researchers, and entrepreneurs using or interested in emerging technologies like 3D printing and design, virtual reality, and more.

Join us on March 6 to hear about innovative health care projects from Baltimore and beyond. Talks will focus on:

  • bringing prototyping tools and makerspaces into hospitals
  • 3D printing custom prostheses for patients with conductive hearing loss
  • building customized assistive devices for physical therapy patients
  • commercializing robotics therapy research
  • supporting local medical device startups and manufacturing

The following speakers will be featured:

Anna Young
CEO, MakerHealth
Co-founder, MakerNurse

Keynote: “A Maker Revolution in Health”

 

Jeffrey Hirsch, MD
Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
University of Maryland School of Medicine

“Surgical Reconstruction of the Ossicular Chain with Custom 3D Printed Ossicular Prosthesis”

 

Amy Hurst, PhD
Human Centered Computing
University of Maryland, Baltimore County

“Challenges and Opportunities for Integrating 3D Printing into Physical Therapy”

 

Bradley Hennessie
Co-founder, NextStep Robotics
Former Clinical Research Specialist, University of Maryland School of Medicine

“Research Translation: Lab to Clinic”

 

Jeff Quinn
Co-President, Director of Engineering and Development
Engineered Medical Systems, Inc

“The Factory and The LaunchPort: Medical Device Manufacturing and Startup Accelerator”


Additionally, exhibitors will share information about their services and provide hands-on demonstrations of:

  • 3D bio printers
  • virtual reality microscopy and radiology
  • image analysis and visualization software
  • entrepreneurial support
  • and more!

Registration is free.
Refreshments and boxed lunch will be provided.

Date: Tuesday, March 6, 2018
Time: 9:30am – 3pm
Location: University of Maryland, Baltimore Campus Center, Elm Ballrooms
Website: http://expo.hshsl.umaryland.edu
Cost: Free

 

The HS/HSL Maker Expo is made possible thanks to: Health Sciences and Human Services Library, NNLM SEA, arivis, TEDCO, and UM Ventures.

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Whiteboard Project: What Healthy Vending Options Would You Like to See?

The Library Genie was asked for healthy vending options, so we decided to see what you would prefer.

Clif BARS were the winner, with KIND bars, kale chips, and Boom Chicka Pop following closely behind.

The Genie likes Oreos too, but believes they fall more into the delicious than the healthy category.

 

PS: Have you seen the Oreo Peeps? Wow.

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