Friday 19 December 2014

Electronic Learning. Welcome to the Future, We have flying cars!

Hullo!
 
This is the fourth article I am writing in as many weeks. So far the reception has been extremely positive, with a couple of people mentioning they liked the articles whilst in the library, and even a comment on last week’s article! Thanks Anonymous, you’re a swell guy/gal.

Reiterating the end of last week, please never feel afraid to get in touch and let me know about how you feel about this series. As the weeks pass I’d like to tailor it to what you want to hear about, and that can’t happen without me knowing what you like.

Big fan of the eye-candy in last week’s article? He’s married; I’ll have to check with his wife if you want more of that. Missed last week’s? Here it is!

Want more features? A quiz? I have a lot of useless knowledge, but then when I read quizzes on other websites they always seem lame. Maybe not.
Want dessert? Well finish your greens then young man/lady! It’ll put hair on your chest.

I think you get the picture. If there’s something you want me to ramble on about for about 400 words or so , let me know and I’ll try and fit it in.

 

So anyway, to todays topic. Electronic Learning Resources. (ELR)

ELR come in a myriad of forms. E-books, journals, online access, forums, apps, databases (Databi?)

We provide access to all of the above. Except Databi, which isn’t a word, let alone a service. We do have databases though!

As I have mentioned before, our physical journal collection is pretty expansive, giving you that book smell when you open any one of our 407 titles we have in the flesh. That’s not counting the online access you have when mucking about on Open Athens (our service provider). Anyone want to guess how many you get?

You’re very quiet, you need to shout at the screen, I won’t be able to hear you otherwise.

Ok, please don’t shout at the screen, especially if you’re reading from a computer on the cardiology ward.

The final total, including e-books comes to a mind boggling One Hundred and Fourteen Thousand, Four Hundred and Thirteen.

Oh my.

That looks like 114,413 in numbers.

And it costs you the princely sum of £0.00, payable in monthly instalments*

*APR 3.4%, sum payable within 12 months or your home may be repossessed


*Gasp*

Pretty good for nothing right? Come on down and see us on how you too can hold the wisdom of ages in your palm, and laugh like some kind of omnipotent being.

 

UpToDate!

That’s right, we subscribe to UpToDate, which is so good, it has capitalised letters strewn through the title.

I’ll wait for you to get up off the floor after swooning at this latest revelation.

Done? Good. Mop your brow, you look a state. Just kidding, you’re beautiful. All my readers are as beautiful as my own non-existent children.

Anyway, tangent aside, I guess I should tell you about UpToDate (it’s a pain capitalising every other letter in that word) UpToDate is a clinical evidence based search tool that can be used by clinicians and hospital staff to find quick and relevant information on any one of 10,000 topics and counting.

The way it works is the company running UpToDate have a crack team of experts working round the clock researching the methods that have the most clinical evidence to back them up. Want to find out techniques for amputating someone’s leg? They’ve done the research so you don’t have to.
The best thing about it though, is certainly the fact it’s evidence based, and current. No more searching through dusty tomes for the most potent rum to administer when performing an amputation, although if you’re still doing that, I wonder that they let you have a stethoscope.
We recently performed a survey which many of you may have participated in. Here is some of the anonymous feedback that we received.

“(UpToDate) provides key learning in one site allowing improved efficncy of my time

“An invaluable resource for this Trust. Each of us should probably use it even more, it is a great resource particularly for areas outside one's own specialty and to check other matters. It is not advertised sufficiently. Do all the junior staff know of it? It would be as serious loss of we did not have it.”

So pretty positive. I only chose two because I don’t want this article to go on too much, but as the second reviewer suggested, it really is a powerful tool in the medical professional’s arsenal. If you don’t use it already, try giving it a look, you can find a direct link on the SDH intranet homepage on the right. If you do use it already, great!  Maybe recommend it to your colleagues. They will thank you for it. And then you get to be that person who knew about something before it was cool. Everyone loves that person.

 

That’s all for this week!


Until Next Time…

Friday 12 December 2014

Blog Article 3, This Time It's Personal


So here we are again. What should I talk about this week?

While there are several topics I wanted to talk about, I have decided for one more week to talk about the great things we do.

Friday the 28th of November was the Striving for Excellence awards, which all the library staff attended (except the new guy) and all remarked it was brilliant seeing the innovation, effort and quality of care the staff of SDH make part of their everyday jobs.

A link to the full breakdown of the awards and their winners can be found here.

Our very own Liam Thornhill (Library Assistant turned IT Trainer) was a well deserved recipient of the Living the Values award, which he earned by being everything you might want someone helping you to be. Now I don’t want him getting a big head, but he’s been doing a great job here for 4 years, and in filling his role, I am constantly asked “oh are you the lovely young man who helped me last time I was in?”

Now, I am a lovely young man, but I’ve got my work cut out for me if I hope to follow in his footsteps.

 

Scoop It!

I also want you to take a look at the Healthcare Library’s Scoop.it page. It is updated daily with all the latest news from around the web. The two topics curated on there are SDH news which is a delight to read about all the good work you folks are doing, and a healthcare app page updated with information about all the latest apps that can help make clinicians and their patients lives easier/more contained within their smartphones.

Scoop it is an underused tool that I had never heard of before I started work here, but I do recommend checking it out. Think of it more as a Twitter where you follow topics relevant to you rather than people who post motivational quotes and pictures of kittens. Not that kittens aren’t relevant, but you get my gist.

Back on display!

November in the library was “Self-Care Month”. In conjunction with the week running the 17th to the 23rd of November we have had a display of tips and tricks to keep you jolly and healthy throughout winter. Although that display is gone now, you can still get information on the NHS choices website.

Taking its place once more by our glorious self-issue machine is the Mood Boosting Book display. Featuring Works by Terry Pratchett, Victoria Hislop and James Bowden, we have a range of books that will cheer you up on a dismal British December evening.

 

Healthcare Current Awareness Bulletins

Our resident librarians remind me of Santa’s elves. Not because they are short and have high pitched voices, but because they spend a good portion of their time working on Elfcare , sorry Healthcare Current Awareness Bulletins.

These Bulletins are tailor made with the latest guidance and research to help keep you up to date with the most recent developments in the field of your choice. Want to know more about Urology? Who doesn’t?! You can find a focused Bulletin on the topic by simply selecting your topics and emailing them to us at Library.Office@salisbury.nhs.uk.

To save you unnecessary clicking, and because I’m good like that, here is the list of topics you can get updated with.

Acute and Critical Care                              Occupational Health

Alcohol,                                                        Ophthalmology

 Burns and Plastics,                                    Orthopaedics

 Cleft Lip and Palate,                                  Paediatrics

 Dementia,                                                   PCI/Cardiology

 Dermatology                                             Pharmacy

Diabetes/Endocrinology                           Public Health

End of Life Care,                                         Rheumatology

Fertility,                                                       Spinal Cord Injuries

Infection Prevention/Control                  Stroke

Maternity Care                                          Urology

 Neonatal Care                                          Wound Care

Neurology                         

Then your little bundle of research will turn up in your inbox (stocking) periodically all wrapped up and ready to go. See? Elves.
 

So there we are. Another week, another series of flippant remarks and bad irrelevant tangents.

I would love to know what you guys think about the blog, and if there are any topics you might be interested and want to hear me discuss in future articles please leave a comment in the comments section.

Equally if you hate what I’m doing with this blog and only reading in a fit of self-loathing, let me know in the comments. This is the internet and if someone isn’t calling the author rude names on a public domain it just feels a bit weird…

 
Also, you should tell all your colleagues to have a look. It’s nice to share, especially at Christmas!


Until next time…

Tuesday 2 December 2014

Librarians. What on earth do we do?


So they let me write another one. Phew…

This week, now that introductions are out the way, and you know where we are, I want to talk about the jobs that the staff at the Healthcare Library do.

But wait Gareth, don’t you all just sit around reading books and tell people to “shhh” for a living?

Well in a dream world, that would be the plan, but too much shushing starts to wear on the throat after a while, and we all feel like this might be a misappropriation of Trust resources. Instead we carry out tasks that help keep the library running and most importantly, keep access to the resources you guys need available and easy to find.

Sounds easy right?

So, let’s break down our friendly staff into their job roles shall we?

These would be the Librarians and Library Assistants.
That didn’t take long.

Your faithful Library Assistant team at this particular Healthcare Library consists of  myself (Gareth) and my esteemed colleague Anne-Marie Fitton. Our particular responsibilities cover two separate sections of our physical and online resources.

 Anne-Marie is the Keeper of the Books. Not actually her job title but it sounds more dramatic... As well as the myriad of other tasks she performs in her role as our Library Office Manager, she is also the channel through which all our inter-library loans take place. She is an integral cog to our service, and resident expert on all things.

 (I didn’t miss a bit out here, she knows everything)

If you need a book and we can’t provide it from our stock, she can track it down. If you have any queries about the library service, she will know the answer. If there's something strange in your neighbourhood... You should probably call Ghostbusters, but Anne-Marie will give it a crack!

Although I’m still learning, my role is managing the journal stock both electronic and in physical form. This amounts to looking after the collection we have, and adding to it when possible. I’m also responsible for responding to other library’s loan requests, as well as making sure you have a pleasant visit and any issues you encounter are resolved quickly and effectively. I also write the Blog, state the obvious, and run the ScoopIt page.

We are both full-time, so if you are popping in on a weekday when we are staffed, you can be sure to find one of our delightful visages waiting to help.

The Librarians down here are Jenny Lang, Caroline Thomas, and Helen Clemow. When you think librarian, you think some old battle-axe peering down the length of her nose, tutting just loud enough to shame you as you remonstrate what a mistake it was to come to the library whilst still being an organic being that requires breathing to live. Shame on you.

I was apprehensive of having to work with such characters, as I too need oxygen to live, and was beginning to puzzle out a way of somehow oxygenating my blood through some kind of intravenous system. (Patent Pending)

Then I turned up in the library and had to scrap my design. They were extremely tolerant of gas breathing carbon beings! In fact, since I’ve been here I’ve not heard a single tut, remonstration, recrimination, scolding or a haughty sigh!

The librarians are really keen to get the best experience possible for your visits, and keep you coming back. After all, knowledge is power, and we want to empower you to do your job as effectively as possible. That’s our job.

No longer in the dark ages are we. Books are not closely guarded as means of keeping the riff-raff in line any more.

That’s all very well, but what can the Librarian do for you?

A good question and one that cannot be answered in the limited word count available to me. To see a full list of what we can do, click here.

The service that I wanted to tell you about, and possible one of the most valuable services this library provides, is the Literature Search. A literature search is a very simple thing to request. Simply fill in one of our forms at our website with as much detail as possible, and our Librarians will scour the internet and databases, finding up to date and relevant information, fully referenced and ready to go! Time saving extraordinaire!

So once again, thanks for reading and I hope this will inspire you to let us help you do less work.
Until next time…


New Books!

De Swiet's medical disorders in obstetric practice
Powrie, Raymond O
WQ220
Introduction to research
DePoy, Elizabeth
WB25
Communication skills in health and social care
Moss, Bernard
WLM816
Critical reading and writing for postgraduates
Wallace, Mike
L125
Nursing research
Munhall, Patricia L.
WY20
How to write a paper
Hall, George M.
Q50
Risk assessment in people with learning disabilities
Sellars, Carol
WM805
The good research guide
Denscombe, Martyn
HM20
Minor injuries
Purcell, Dennis
WD458
Innovating for patient safety in medicine
Lawton, Rebecca
WA55
Disabling barriers - enabling environments
Swain, John
WB600
Essential knowledge and skills for healthcare assistants
Rawles, Zoe
WY120
Research methods for clinical therapists
Hicks, Carolyn M.
WB25
Succeeding in literature reviews and research project plans for nursing students
Williamson, Graham R.
WY20