Access to full-text and databases has been restored.
601 West Lombard Street
Baltimore MD 21201-1512
Reference: 410-706-7996
Circulation: 410-706-7928
Access to full-text and databases has been restored.
Database access through the HS/HSL website is currently down. Library IT have been notified and are working to resolve the issue. You can still search databases, including MedLine and CINAHL, through the OneSearch box on the HS/HSL website.
An alternate way to access journals, is to use the Library’s catalog. Follow these steps:
3. Search for your journal
4. Click on “Find It” and select the link for full-text (or “Order” if it is a journal we do not subscribe to).
Are you aware of your patients’ ability to understand and act on the information you give them? There is evidence that health care providers overestimate what patients are able to understand. Low health literacy is associated with higher mortality, higher rates of hospitalization and readmission, and poor self-management skills for chronic disease. This workshop covers the basics of health literacy, provides a hands-on opportunity to put difficult medical jargon into plain language, and introduces tools that will assist you in creating easy-to-read materials.
To attend, please register here (or drop in).
February 12, 2018
12:00 PM to 01:00 PM
HS/HSL, Room LL03
Due to scheduled product maintenance by the product vendor ProQuest, the RefWorks citation manager and Pivot database will not be available from 10:00pm, Saturday, January 27th to 6:00am, Sunday, January 28th.
Library IT issues have been resolved and you can now access our electronic journals and e-books.
HS/HSL Maker Expo
Wednesday, March 6, 2018
10am – 3pm
SMC Campus Center, Elm Ballrooms
Free, lunch provided
Calling all UMB makers, innovators, and entrepreneurs!
We’re pleased to announce the HS/HSL Maker Expo – a health sciences networking and showcase event to be held at the SMC Campus Center on March 6, 2018.
The HS/HSL Maker Expo includes:
Meet and learn from academic and industry experts pushing the boundaries of health care with emerging technologies.
Network with other faculty, staff, and students who are incorporating 3D printing and modeling, virtual reality, arduinos and drones, and other new tools into their work and personal lives.
Attend the free workshop after the Expo to learn about making 3D printable molecular models using open source tools (seating is limited).
This event is free and open to the public. Registration is required, space is limited.
See our website for more information on speakers, exhibitors, registration and more, http://
Library IT are working on the issue with the vendor of these products. To access journals, you can use the Library’s catalog. Follow these steps:
3. Search for your journal
4. Click on “Find It” and select the link for full-text (or “Order” if it is a journal we do not subscribe to).
Image credit: Self-folding strand into 3D cube. Self-Assembly Lab. Available at: http://www.selfassemblylab.net/4DPrinting.php. |
Article by Tony Nguyen, MLIS, AHIP, Technology & Communications Coordinator, NNLM, SEA Regional Medical Library. Published in the January 16, 2018 edition of MLA News.
Libraries with makerspaces are aware of 3D printers. These specialized printers can turn digital blueprints into a physical object. Complex 3D printed objects may be in pieces that require time to assemble into the final product. 4D printing relies on much of the same technology. However, 4D printers rely on special material and digital designs that allow the 3D printed objects to reshape themselves or self-assemble over time, post production.
Skylar Tibbits, codirector of the Self-Assembly Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is often attributed with coining the term “4D Printing,” as he introduced the concept in a 2013 TED Talk. “Normally, we print things and we think they’re done,” Tibbits says. “That’s the final output and then we assemble them. But we want them to be able to transform and change shape over time; and we want them to assemble themselves” [1].
With the idea of having the printed objects assemble themselves, Tibbits managed to program the printer with a precise geometric code based on the object’s angles, dimensions, and measurements that dictate how it should change shape when confronted with outside forces. The outside force like water, movement, or temperature, for example, can act as trigger that starts the object’s transformation to begin its program and execute its change of shape.
Potential uses for 4D printing are enticing to many researchers. For city infrastructures, 4D printed water pipes could expand and contract due to changes in season. Additionally, 4D printed items could be used to repair items in space, or shoes could change tread based on changes in weather or in surfaces, such as whether the person is running on pavement versus grass.
Currently, 4D printing is still in research and development as it is a collaborative design concept by industry leaders and research facilities: Self-Assembly Lab, Stratasys, and Autodesk. However, more labs and facilities are prototyping 4D printing to consider its uses. Printing an item in 4D is not yet available in consumer markets, but it is certainly an emerging technology to follow. Over the next several years, 4D printing may become available in library makerspaces as it becomes more readily available.
To learn more about 4D printing, check out a few selected resources:
Reference
Database access through the HS/HSL’s homepage has been restored.
Database access through the HS/HSL website is currently down. Library IT have been notified and are working to resolve the issue. You can still search databases, including MedLine and CINAHL, through the OneSearch box on the HS/HSL website.