President’s Page
Emily Kean
Edith Starbuck
CAHSLA Minutes Spring Business Meeting
Treasurer’s Report
Program Committee Report 2012 – 2013
Edith Starbuck, Committee Member
After the tour, we ate together and held the annual business meeting where the 2013-2014 officers were announced: President – open; Vice President- Edith Starbuck; Treasurer-Cathy Constance; Secretary- Brigid Almaguer; Webmaster-Amy Koshoffer.
CAHSLA closed out the program year with a picnic at Drake Park on 6/20/13. As usual, CAHSLA provided drinks and a couple of dishes while members brought other delicious dishes to share. Our annual summer picnic at Daniel Drake Park in Kennedy Heights was
graced by extremely pleasant weather. As is our tradition, family members, both human and canine, were welcome. Those in attendance included: Edith Starbuck; Sharon Purtee; Carole Baker and Rosie*; Val Purvis and Albus* and Ater*; Barbara Slavinski and husband Rick and daughter Monica and Marley*; Regina Hartman and daughter Gabrielle; Michael Douglas; Lisa McCormick; Cathy Constance; Emily Kean; Amy Koshoffer; and Nonnie Klein. The picnic meeting is 99% social with everyone mingling and catching-up on events at our respective libraries. After a brief business meeting, there was more time to enjoy the park and each other’s company.
Minutes for the End-of-the-Year Picnic Meeting
President Emily Kean welcomed everyone to the meeting at 6:45 pm and offered her thanks to the Program Planning Committee for organizing the picnic and all of the association’s programming this past year. She also thanked Regina Hartman and Sharon Purtee for their work on the By-Laws Revisions. Treasurer Cathy Constance gave her treasury and membership report (printed elsewhere in this issue of the Chronicle). Regina Hartman, Chair of the Nominations and Election Committee, gave her report that Lisa McCormick is nominated for President; Edith Starbuck President Elect/Program Committee Chair; Cathy Constance Treasurer; and Brigid Almaquer. There were no additional nominations from the floor. Regina will be sending out the ballot. Emily again thanked everyone and presented members of the Executive Committee and Program Committee with lovely New Guinea Impatience. With no other business, President Kean concluded the meeting at 6:48 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
Lisa McCormick for Brigid Almaquer
*Denotes canine family member
CAHSLA COLLEAGUES
Kudos
We are pleased to hear of the publication of an article by former CAHSLA member Katie Kallmeyer Wolf published in the April-June 2013 issue of the Journal of Electronic Resources for Medical Libraries. This is a very timely article for many of us as we evaluate Elsevier’s new replacement product for MDConsult.
ClinicalKey: A Review
Katherine Wolf, Nakia Woodward & Richard Wallace
Journal of Electronic Resources in Medical Libraries, Volume 10, Issue 2, April-June 2013. Pages: 79-87. DOI: 10.1080/15424065.2013.792592
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15424065.2013.792592?ai=2d1&ui=3z4zb&af=T
Thank You
Dear CAHSLA Colleagues,
I am truly touched by your kind words and expressions of sympathy on the passing of my father. Your donation to St. Elizabeth Hospice in his memory means so much to me. I am so grateful for your friendship and support at this difficult time. Thank you so very much.
With gratitude, Lisa McCormick
In the Literature and on the ‘Net
Search: Bizarre health issues
Information for the Practicing Health Sciences Librarian from AHRQ
NGC Announces Revised Criteria for Inclusion of Clinical Practice Guidelines
On June 3, AHRQ’s National Guideline Clearinghouse (NGC) announced its revised criteria for inclusion of clinical practice guidelines. The new criteria reflect the Institute of Medicine’s definition of a clinical practice guideline provided in its 2011 standards-setting publication, Clinical Practice Guidelines We Can Trust. The two main changes to the NGC inclusion criteria are that the guideline:
• be based on a systematic review of the evidence, through a literature review that summarizes evidence by identifying, selecting, assessing, and synthesizing the findings of similar but separate studies, and
• contains an assessment of the benefits and harms of the recommended care and alternative care options
The revised criteria will become effective June 2014.
UC nursing students to learn with iPad mini
Posted: Posted by Kelly Taylor – FOX19 News Jun 03, 2013 5:14 PM EDT Updated: Jun 03, 2013 5:14 PM EDT
Sophomores at UC’s College of Nursing will be the first class to exclusively use an iPad rather than textbooks. “Our integration of iPad represents a shift—a real opportunity to not just impact education, but to transform the way we learn, interact and collaborate,” says Chris Edwards, assistant dean for information technology and communications, and director of the Center for Academic Technology and Education Resources (CATER) at the College of Nursing. Earlier this year, Edwards was named an Apple Distinguished Educator by Apple. Edwards says the iPad changes the way content is taught to students. For example, students can download apps that let them view an animated heart beating in 3-D and diagnose standardized patients via video. In addition, they will have the option to take and share notes directly in electronic textbooks, increasing collaboration among students.
The College of Nursing began their iPad initiative in 2011 when UC’s nursing educators were taught the skills needed to deliver nursing content to an already tech-savvy student body, such as a four-day training course on how to use the iPad, Apple TV and apps. UC nursing students can expect the cost of the iPad mini with AppleCare+ to be $530. The students purchase and own the device, which replaces all hard-bound textbooks normally required. Student fees that previously covered printing costs will be re-allocated to provide nursing-specific software and apps. College of Nursing staff says financial assistance is available based on need. Fall semester classes at UC begin Monday, August 26. The iPad initiative will eventually encompass use of iPad technology throughout all class levels at the College of Nursing.
Why you feel compelled to finish that book you hate: Type-A personalities more likely to abandon half-read books June 7, 1013
Failing to finish a book “goes against how we’re built” and ultimately can cause anxiety, Kaiser Permanente psychologist Matthew Wilhelm explained to the Wall Street Journal’s Heidi Mitchell this week. “There is a tendency for us to perceive objects as ‘finished’ or ‘whole’ even though they may not be,” Wilhelm said, adding that this “motivation is very powerful and helps to explain anxiety around unfinished activities.”
Certain personality types are better able to abandon a story mid-tale, Wilhelm says. Type-A personalities are more likely to abandon a half-read book because they are not motivated by reward or punishment. In contrast, laid-back Type-B personalities may never even start the book if they think they will not be able to finish it. But it’s social pressure, rather than personality type, that drives most people to finish books, Wilhelm says. “I have found that people in their 30s, they feel guilted into finishing—just the same way that they were told to eat everything on their plate,” librarian Mary Wilkes Towner says, adding, “If you want to be culturally literate, skim. But we all have to give ourselves permission to quit” (Mitchell, Journal, 6/5).
The Library that Never Closes
Written by John Faherty
May 31, 2103
http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20130531/NEWS10/305310025?gcheck=1
This spring, Gieseke put in another Little Free Library specifically for kids and closer to the ground. And yes, she knows she likes her project more than most people might. But there really is something kind of magical about it. “It … can be very private,” Gieseke said of the people who come to her library. “They look, they read a page or two. They put one back, they pick another one up. If Karl and I see somebody out there, looking through the books, we leave them be. We don’t want to scare anybody off.” But it turns out people love to talk about the books and the library and what they are reading and what they have liked and what they have not. The founder of the Little Free Library, Todd Bol, built his first library to honor his mother who had recently died. She was an English teacher and avid reader, so he thought she might love the idea. The first went up in 2009, in Hudson, Wis., on the St. Croix River. Bol thought it would be a quiet little tribute to his mother. He was wrong. People loved the idea and started asking him to build one for them. They took photos of the libraries and sent them to friends around the country, who then wanted their own Little Free Library.
Little Free Library is now a nonprofit organization with a two-fold mission. First, to promote literacy, love of reading and book exchanges. It also wants to help build community. People can buy a library and register it, or they can build their own. There are now more than 7,000 Little Free Libraries in the world. Bol is not surprised how much people love to read, but he loves to hear all the stories about how these little boxes have forged relationships on streets across the country. “I’ve had so many people tell me that they are meeting neighbors they never even knew they had,” Bol said. “One said, ‘I’ve met more people in the last five to seven days than I had in 30 years.’ ” (This is entirely true and I can speak from experience. My wife and kids just put up a Little Free Library in front of our home. It is dedicated to my mother-in-law, Elizabeth Ann Kendrick.)
Library Leaders May Seek to Make Levy Permanent
Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County will consider making the library’s property tax levy permanent, ending the need for periodic voter approval.” PLCHC library director Kim Fender explained the plan, to seek a permanent levy, also called a continuing levy by state law, which means that “ the levy would no longer come up for periodic review by voters if it wins approval. There are advantages and drawbacks to a continuing levy,” Fender said. She said advantages include not having to continually seek ballot approval and the ability to plan. The drawback: Over time the levy would generate less revenue.”
- Cardiac angioplasty or stents: A 2011 JAMA study found that 12% of all angioplasty procedures lack medical necessity.
- Cardiac pacemakers: A 2011 JAMA study found no medical evidence to support installing 22.5% of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs).
- Spinal fusion: A 2011 study in Surgical Neurology International found that more than 17% of patients who were told they needed spinal surgery had no abnormal neurological or radiographic findings.
- Hysterectomy: A 2000 study from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists indicated that 70% of hysterectomies may be inappropriate.
- Knee and hip replacement: A 2012 Health Affairs study found that patients who have “decision aids” with information on joint replacements underwent 26% fewer hip replacements and 38% fewer knee replacements.
- Cesarean section: A 2013 Health Affairs study found major variation in the cesarean rates at hospitals nationwide.
Cultural Competence in Health Sciences
NN/LM Southeastern/Atlantic Region (SE/A) Outreach and Communications Coordinator, David Midyette, has penned an article on the SEA Currents blog entitled: Cultural Competence in Health Sciences. Check it out: http://nnlm.gov/sea/newsletter/2013/02/cultural-competence-in-health-sciences/ Here’s an excerpt:
The old analogy of the United States as a melting pot is being transitioned into a more modern understanding of the U.S. as more of a salad. The various ethnic and cultural backgrounds of people in the country, legal, illegal, or otherwise, present the health care community with a plethora of beliefs about health and healing. Frequently these beliefs come into direct contact/conflict with the Western style of medicine that is the predominant practice in the U.S. healthcare system. State medical and allied health licensing boards are increasingly faced with the challenges of ensuring that new practitioners are culturally competent as they begin to practice their craft, and that experienced practitioners develop skills to deal with sometimes drastically different belief systems held by their patients.
Court: Scientific Articles Protected by First Amendment
“The case—which was brought by New York-based drugmaker ONY—focused on a 2011 scientific article that discussed the effectiveness of drugs designed to help premature infants with an increased risk of collapsed lungs and respiratory distress breathe more easily, including Chiesi Farmaceutici SpA’s Curosurf and ONY’s Infasurf and Survanta.
In the lawsuit, ONY claimed that the article—published in the American Academy of Pediatrics’ (AAP) Journal of Perinatology—contained several factual errors suggesting Infasurf had a greater infant mortality rate than Curosurf.
The lawsuit also argued that the article later was used in advertising materials by Chiesi and Cornerstone Therapeutics, which marketed Curosurf in the United States. It accused the two companies of violating the federal Lanham Act and a New York state law by using deceptive business practices, injurious falsehood, and interfering with its business with hospitals and health care providers.
Judge Gerard Lynch of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York wrote in his ruling that scientific conclusions regarding topics that are open for debate and published in scientific journals cannot result in damages awards for defamation. The ruling also stated that companies are allowed to use scientific statements published in research articles for promotional purposes as long as the conclusions do not mislead consumers.
Lynch noted that “academic freedom is a special concern of the First Amendment” and warned against extending the Lanham Act to intrude on the amendment’s values.”
Calendar
July 18 SLA Cincinnati Chapter, 3:30 – 5:00, “Let’s Talk About Disaster Preparedness,” Health Foundation of Cincinnati, Norwood, OH
October 4 – 8 Midwest Chapter Annual Conference, East Peoria, IL. “Navigating a River of Information”