Tuesday, 28 April 2009

EXAM REVISION: late night opening at HSL-RHH

The Health Sciences Library at RHH is opening late for exam revision. Details below.

exam-revision

EXAM REVISION: late night opening at HSL-RHH

The importance to students of late-night opening of the Health Sciences Library at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital has been raised by many Medical and Dental Students and in particular by your MedSoc Student Reps. As a result, the Library is extending the opening hours of HSL-RHH, over the coming examination period, as follows:

Tuesday 5 May to Friday 8 May, open till 21.30
Monday 11 May to Friday 15 , open till 21.30
Tuesday 26 May to Friday 29 May, open till 21.30

The Library will open 09.00-17.00 on both May bank holidays (4 and 25 May)

On all other weekdays the Library will close at 19.00; Saturday and Sunday opening is unchanged.

The periods are offered as ‘revision opening’, providing access to books, journals and computers. The Library will be unstaffed apart from a porter.

We will monitor usage of the Library at these times.

Good luck in your exams

Vic


Friday, 27 March 2009

Jade Goody: Depraved or deprived?

Jade Goody: depraved or deprived?
jade_goody.jpg Famous for merely being famous, Jade Goody has been a part of our everyday culture since she was catapulted to fame by the Big Brother series in 2002. Her death this week, at the tragically young age of 27 made headline news in every national paper. Love her, loath her or have an insistent indifference, it is difficult not to have a view.

It is easy to pass judgment on Jade's lifestyle, her antics have had parents the length and breadth of the country shuddering with disbelief. But, would any of us actually have been all that different if we had been exposed to the social circumstances which dominated Jade's young life?

Jade's hugely public death from cervical cancer has increased health checks amongst young people in our society in a way that most clinicians or politicians can only dream about.

It is indeed good news that Pap smears have risen by 20% since Jade used her case to promote uptake. However, if it is a truism that there is no more powerful therapy than prevention perhaps what we, as a society, might do is to look at the research evidence on aetiological (causation) factors of Jade's ill-health and use this in a non-judgmental way to help the young and vulnerable people in our society.

To retrieve best evidence on the aetiology of disease search Medline and use the term 'risk' in combination with a MeSH search of your disease.

The screenshots below show you how.

For someone who has been dismissed repeatedly as an uncouth, uneducated non-entity Jade Goody has had more influence on the health of the nation in her short lifetime than whole teams of healthcare workers seem able to achieve in their entire careers. Jade Goody: depraved or deprived? But for the grace of God go I ...

Vic

Retrieving evidence on the aetiology of disease

1. Connect to Ovid Medline via MUSE-Library-Subject databases-alphabetical list-O-OvidSP-Connect-Medline 1950-2009 (for the full archive)


2. Select Advanced Ovid search to facilitate MeSH searching, enter the condition and click on search. MeSH (thesaurus) searching is recommended because of the increased recall facilitated by the inclusion of all synonyms.

screen_1_cc.bmp

Wednesday, 18 March 2009

What a tweet

What a tweet

The University Library's Customer Services Department is using twitter to communicate news and views to our staff and students.

Find out what I am twittering on about by following UniSheffieldLib

Follow UniSheffieldLib on Twitter

Vic

Thursday, 12 March 2009

Find it @ Sheffield

The University Library has a new platform for our eJournals. To help you search ejournals using Find it @ Sheffield we've compiled a list of ten search tips and included illustrations to demonstrate. If you have any feedback please comment or email me directly for further help.

1. If you know exactly what you're looking for you can use the 'starts with' button to be prompted with predictive text:


2. Alternatively, you may want to browse titles that contain a particular keyword:



Friday, 6 February 2009

iComment iPod competition is drawn!

iComment iPod competition is drawn

dental_school1.jpg

Last week it was Faculty of Medicine Library Committee and top of the agenda was to draw the Dental School iPod iComment competition. Chris Stokes, the FLC staff rep and student reps Clare Morris and Katharina Ahlert did the honours (see pic).

and the winners are (drum roll) …

1st prize 8gb iPod Nano Adam Mowatt

2nd prize Oxford Handbook of Clinical Dentistry Letty Hancock

3rd prize Memory stick Neeraj Pattni

Thank you for everyone who has posted comments and taken part. I hope you will continue to find this blog a useful resource.

Vic

Tuesday, 27 January 2009

Struggling to get hold of the books you need?

Struggling to get hold of the books you need? Ange Greenwood, Counter Coordinator in the IC and the Library’s Resident Reservations Reporter tells us how in seven simple steps …

The University Library has a very effective system in place for ensuring you get the books you need, and we normally supply material within a few days. Here’s how:

  1. Check Star, the catalogue available on the Library tab in MUSE, to find the book you want

  2. Make a note of whether or not it’s out on loan

  3. If it’s not, write down the shelfmark and go to look for it on the shelves at the appropriate Library site

  4. If the book is on loan to someone or you can’t find it on the shelves click on ‘request’ and follow the on-screen instructions (please note that if you choose Information Commons, St Georges Library or Western Bank Library as your collection site, in order to make your item available quickly you may be asked to collect it from any one of these sites)

  5. If you are unable to get to the Library, find the book on Star, click on ‘request’ and follow the instructions

  6. We will email you when your book is ready for collection and tell you which site you should collect it from

  7. Don’t forget that staff are there to help



Remember it’s always quicker to check the shelves yourself rather than place a request, and be aware that if someone else finds the book first they can borrow it.

Ange :-)

Monday, 26 January 2009

Revise in the Health Sciences Library

A quick reminder that the Health Sciences Library at RHH is open late every night this week for revision purposes. Details below.

exam-revision

EXAM REVISION: late night opening at HSL-RHH

The importance to students of late-night opening of the Health Sciences Library at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital has been raised by many Medical and Dental Students and in particular by your MedSoc Student Reps. As a result, the Library is extending the opening hours of HSL-RHH, over the coming examination period, as follows:

Monday 1 December to Friday 5 December, open till 21.30
Monday 5 January 2009 to Friday 9 January, open till 21.30
Monday 26 January 2009 to Friday 30 January, open till 21.30.

On all other weekdays the Library will close at 19.00; Saturday and Sunday opening is unchanged.

The periods are offered as ‘revision opening’, providing access to books, journals and computers. The Library will be unstaffed apart from a porter.

We will monitor usage of the Library at these times.

Good luck in your exams

Vic