Results 301 to 310 of about 194,617 (343)
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Where Is the Medical Librarian?
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1976To the Editor.— Articles advising the physician on how to keep up with his continuing education rarely mention the medical library as a useful aid. However, there is a potentially revolutionary change taking place. The clinical medical librarian, rather than remaining passively within the library, is now actively joining the health care team by going ...
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Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1960
To Dr. E. Vincent Askey, President, American Medical Association : The medical librarians of this country have worked diligently to assist your profession in all phases of medicine. For the medical educator, the medical researcher, and the practicing physician we have developed various types of libraries and we have devised ways to meet the numerous ...
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To Dr. E. Vincent Askey, President, American Medical Association : The medical librarians of this country have worked diligently to assist your profession in all phases of medicine. For the medical educator, the medical researcher, and the practicing physician we have developed various types of libraries and we have devised ways to meet the numerous ...
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Microblogging for Medical Libraries and Librarians
Journal of Electronic Resources in Medical Libraries, 2009Microblogging is the latest and greatest technology to hit libraries and their staffs across the country. Medical libraries, physicians, students, and national health organizations are all starting to utilize microblogging services such as Twitter. This new type of communication is designed to provide its audience with short, to-the-point information ...
Dana M. DeFebbo+2 more
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Experience and Outcomes of Medical Librarian Rounding
Medical Reference Services Quarterly, 2007This article highlights the positive results that can be achieved when a medical librarian rounds with a community hospital's Multidisciplinary Rounds (MDR) team. Background is provided on the rounding process on the hospital's Intensive Care Unit, and case studies report outcomes of the librarian's research.
Jane Bridges+4 more
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The new roles of medical librarians in medical research
Information and Learning Science, 2018Purpose This study aims to highlight the role of librarians as an essential element in medical research. For this purpose, the primary research process was divided into three phases: before, during and after. Then, the roles of librarians associated with each phase were separated and the viewpoint of researchers and librarians on the importance of ...
Hamideh Ehtesham+3 more
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Journal of Hospital Librarianship, 2001
Abstract This paper summarizes the development of the role of clinical medical librarianship, describes the Clinical Medical Librarian (CML) Program at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center in Albuquerque, and discusses the potential evolution of this CML program in context of the new role of informationist.
Sarah Knox Morley, Holly Shipp Buchanan
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Abstract This paper summarizes the development of the role of clinical medical librarianship, describes the Clinical Medical Librarian (CML) Program at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center in Albuquerque, and discusses the potential evolution of this CML program in context of the new role of informationist.
Sarah Knox Morley, Holly Shipp Buchanan
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The Librarian’s Contribution to Continuing Medical Education
Medical Reference Services Quarterly, 2017At many hospitals, including Robert Wood Johnson (RWJ) University Hospital Rahway, librarians facilitate continuing medical education (CME) programs, sometimes working in that capacity as much as in their traditional librarian functions such as reference, research, cataloging, and bibliographic instruction.
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The problem with BEAUTY: a medical librarian's perspective
BMJ, 2015I strongly disagree with one of Pottegard and colleagues’ BEAUTY criteria for the standardised assessment of acronym quality: five points if the acronym is a real word.1 From a medical librarian’s point of view, real words as clinical trial names—especially real words commonly used in medicine—make clinical trials very difficult to find in Medline and ...
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Subprofessional Medical Librarians
New England Journal of Medicine, 1973Zimmer Sk, Olechno G
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