2. HPD Library Homepage www.nova.edu/hpdlibrary
A copy of these slides on the COM Library website for your future reference.
3. The powerpoint is on the tab [Library Info/Access for Clinical
Affiliates/Residents
4. The first tab will allow you to search through a
catalog of the print and electronic resources the
Library subscribes to.
You can perform a search of the Library
catalog using the search widget on the
homepage. To see if we have a copy of
Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine
(Ex:) You can type in Harrison’s …
Search the
Library
Catalog
www.nova.edu/hpdlibrary
5. You will have to click on the title to see full record
and access the hyperlink for the book.
www.nova.edu/hpdlibrary
9. Benefits of a MyAccess account:
•Access to the app
•Access to the Q&A feature and prior quiz result scores.
•Notification of new content and new editions of interest to you via the Alerts
feature.
•Save and download image capability, including the ability to download images
directly to PowerPoint.
10. You will have to click on the title to see full record
and access the hyperlink for the book.
www.nova.edu/hpdlibrary
11.
12.
13. Finding the Full Text
Full Text Finder is where you would go if you know the name of the journal
you are interested in accessing or if you are interested in finding out if we
have full text electronic access to a particular journal.
eJournals
Full Text
finder
14.
15. Because we license the content from
the publisher we get to take advantage
of the other features on the site such as
the Videos, Interactive Medical Cases
and Audio Summaries etc.
18. [Sample Search] Find the full text of this article:
“Preventing Cardiac Implantable Electronic
Device Infections.”
19. You should get a list of possible matches. To see
whether or not NSU has access to the full text you
have to click on the article title to open the whole
record for the citation.
20. Sometimes you will see other full text links, like this
one from Elsevier. These links are provided by the
Publisher and may not work.
The button is what you are looking for.
21. Full Text Finder - will
let you know if we
subscribe to that
journal electronically
in ANY of our
databases.
22. After each database name, you need to
take note the date range!
This will determine which of these
databases will have the specific article you
need.
23. To find the article:
1. Navigate the archives list to locate
the Year, Volume, Issue and Page
OR
2. Type the article title into the
search box .
24. Sometimes, ClinicalKey requires you to create a
personal account to access certain content but this
time, I was able to just click on the PDF and it
automatically downloaded the PDF
25. • Now lets do that again, and pretend that the
article was NOT available electronically using
the Find It button OR the Full Text Finder
44. COMLEX
Medical Certification
Family Medicine (ABFM)
Internal Medicine (ABIM)
Pediatrics (ABP)
Special Purpose Examination (SPEX)
Urgent Care (ABUCM)
USMLE
Step 1 – Board preparation
Step 1 – Medical Subject Review
Step 2 CK Board Preparation
Step 2 CK Medical Subject Review
Step 3 – Board Preparation
Step 3 – Medical Subject Review
Medical Subjects
Basic Health Sciences
–anatomy -
microbiology
–biochemistry -neuroanatomy
–Cytology and histology -pathology
–Embryology -pharmacology
–Immunology -physiology
Clinical Health Sciences
–OB/GYN – Internal & Clinical Medicine
–Pediatrics – Physical Diagnosis
–Preventative Medicine & Public Health
–Psychiatry - Surgery
49. • Not Apps but important databases
• Case Files collection & LexiComp
50. Case Files: Microbiology 3e
Case Files: Neurology 2e
Case Files: Neuroscience 2e
Case Files: Ob/Gyn 5e
Case Files: Orthopaedic Surgery
Case Files: Pathology 2e
Case Files: Pediatrics 5e
Case Files: Pharmacology 3e
Case Files: Physiology 2e
Case Files: Psychiatry 5e
Case Files: Surgery 5e
Case Files: Anatomy 3e
Case Files: Anesthesiology
Case Files: Biochemistry 3e
Case Files: Cardiology
Case Files: Critical Care
Case Files: Emergency Medicine 3e
Case Files: Family Medicine 3e
Case Files: Family Medicine 4e
Case Files: Geriatrics
Case Files: Gynecologic Surgery
Case Files: High-Risk Obstetrics
Case Files: Internal Medicine 4e
Case Files: Medical Ethics and Professionalism
51. The concise and in-depth clinical content of
Lexicomp allows pharmacist's, physicians, and
nurses find answers quickly and efficiently
while helping make safer medication decisions.
52. Drug Monographs, Patient Drug and Disease
Education, Pediatric/Neonatal, IV Compatibility,
Toxicology, Oncology, Custom Reports and more.
53. All HPD databases are available on
mobile devices by logging into them
from the HPD Library database page.
Mobile Apps
54. • Access Medicine
• Audio Digest
• ClinicalKey app
• Clinical Pharmacology
• First Consult
• Johns Hopkins Guides (ABX, HIV, Diabetes)
• Medical Letter mobile app registration
• Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database
• Rosetta Stone Mobile app
• UpToDate App
• Visual DX mobile
55. The AccessMedicine App from McGraw-Hill Medical delivers
indispensable support and invaluable point of care solutions for
clinical practice through these mobile features:
•Quick Medical Dx & Tx is a collection of concise evidence-based
outlines of conditions and disorders most often encountered in
medical practice – perfect for high-yield review or for quick
reference in the clinical setting.
•Fitzpatrick’s Color Atlas of Clinical Dermatology facilitates
dermatologic diagnosis by providing color images of skin lesions,
plus a summary outline of skin disorders and diseases.
•Differential Diagnosis Tool provides more than 1,000 diagnoses
through Diagnosaurus®, a McGraw-Hill Medical tool that
efficiently allows you to browse by symptom, disease, or organ
system at the point of care.
•Diagnostic Tests, from Pocket Guide to Diagnostic Tests, is a quick
reference guide to the selection and interpretation of commonly
used diagnostic tests, including laboratory procedures in the
clinical setting.
Note: To maintain uninterrupted access to the AccessMedicine
App you will need to sign-in every 90 days through your
institution. Your My Access account user name and password will
activate this app.
*This IS an app, and only requires Wi-Fi access for
the initial download and updates.Access Medicine
56. The HPD Library subscribes to the following categories:
Anesthesiology Oncology
Emergency Medicine Ophthalmology
Family Practice Orthopaedics
General Surgery Otolaryngology
Internal Medicine Neurology
Pediatrics Psychiatry
Obstetrics/Gynecology Urology
Audio Digest – MP3 of clinical lectures presented by experts.
*This is an app, but requires you to be connected to Wi-Fi to download the podcast,
but then can be used offline.
58. First Consult
• Requires personal
account in ClinicalKey
• User-friendly access to
the latest information
on:
• patient evaluation
• diagnosis
• clinical management
• Prognosis
• prevention
*This IS an app, and only requires Wi-Fi access for the
initial download and updates.
59. Full-text information on all US
prescription drugs, as well as
herbal supplements, nutritional
and over-the-counter products,
and investigational drugs
The mobile site includes:
• Drug Interaction Reports
• MedCounselor Sheets are Clinical
Pharmacology patient medication
information (PMI) sheets
• Clinical Calculators: a number of
Drug calculators and Medical
calculators & Unit Conversion
calculators
*This is NOT an app, but a mobile
optimized site that requires Wi-Fi
access
**Requires an access code.
Contact me!!
60. The Johns Hopkins
POC-IT Guides are
evidence-based clinical
decision resources.
Trusted content in the
Guides is easily
accessed, promptly
applied, and frequently
updated.
Access via
UCentral
*This IS an app,
and only requires Wi-Fi access for the
initial download and updates.
Johns Hopkins ABX Guide
Review antibiotics, pathogens, infectious
diseases, and drugs.
Johns Hopkins Diabetes Guide
Search clinical tests, management,
complications, and medications.
Johns Hopkins HIV Guide
Look up infections, complications, pathogens,
management, and resistances.
61. The Medical Letter on Drugs and
Therapeutics - Objective, peer-
reviewed evaluations of new FDA-
approved drugs, and new
information on previously
approved drugs
Treatment Guidelines from The
Medical Letter- Unbiased reviews
of drug classes used to treat
common disorders. Includes the
doses, adverse effects and the
recommendations of Medical
Letter consultants;
*This IS an app, and only requires Wi-Fi access for the
initial download and updates.
62. *This IS an app, and only requires Wi-Fi for
the initial download and updates.
Natural Medicines
Comprehensive Database App
The Natural Medicines
Comprehensive Database App
provides up-to-date, authoritative
information on complementary,
alternative, and integrative
therapies.
Data is stored on your mobile
device, so you can access the app
without an Internet connection.
63. Rosetta Stone –
Level 1 of 30 languages
Arabic
Chinese (Mandarin)
Dari
Dutch
English (American)
English (British)
Filipino (Tagalog)
French
German
Greek
Hebrew
Hindi
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latin
Pashto
Persian (Farsi)
Polish
Portuguese (Brazil)
Russian
Spanish (Latin
America)
Spanish (Spain)
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Urdu
Vietnamese
64. Red Book® Online is the online
home of the report of the AAP
Committee on Infectious
Diseases. Offering instant Web-
based access, you will find the
complete text of the Red Book®,
the complete visual library of
more than 2,500 images, vaccine
status information, infectious
disease news, and much more.
*This IS an app, and only
requires Wi-Fi
access for the initial download
and updates
65. StatRef Mobile is a
streamlined version of the
online subscription.
Because some of the value-
added resources are memory,
megabyte and/or Flash
intensive, not all resources
are available at this time on
the mobile version.
*This is an app, but requires Wi-Fi to access all content.
66. UpToDate is a clinical point-of-
care database.
To register for access current
NSU students, faculty & staff
and clinical affiliates must
enter through one of the
UpToDate link(s) on the HPD
Library website and
register/create a personal
account for UpToDate.
*This IS an app, but requires Wi-Fi access for
the initial download and updates and usage.
**IMPORTANT: In order to maintain remote access to the app, UpToDate wants
you to verify that you are still affiliated with NSU every 30 days. You can do this re-
authentication simply by accessing UpToDate via one of the UpToDate link(s) on the
HPD Library website, then signing into your personal UpToDate account.
67. • Lexi-Comp's comprehensive Drug-to-Drug, Drug-
to-Herb and Herb-to-Herb Interaction Analysis
Program
• Updated daily
• Easy limits in search box (adult, pediatric, graphics)
• Direct export graphics into PowerPoint
• Practice-Changing Updates
68. Dear Kristin Kroger,
This friendly reminder is to notify you that your remote access to UpToDate® will lapse on
07/30/2015 unless you take action. In order to maintain uninterrupted access to UpToDate
Anywhere, you must verify your continued affiliation with Nova Southeastern University once
every 90 days.
Verifying your affiliation is fast and easy: Simply log in to
http://www.uptodate.com/login from the Nova Southeastern University network with your
UpToDate user name and password.
User name: Kk663@nova.edu
Your password is confidential; if you forgot your password, click here.
To learn more about this process, including other ways you can verify your affiliation, click
here.
If you have any questions about your UpToDate account, please email us at
customerservice@uptodate.com.
70. *This is an app, but requires Wi-Fi to access all content.
Custom Differential
Diagnosis
Build a custom
differential by entering
patient findings
Diagnosis
Lookup
Lookup a
diagnosis to get
quick access to
images, best
tests,
management
pearls and
more.
71. To Register for NSU HPD Library
Access
College of Medicine Residents:
Carol Siu, Administrative Director CEME
casiu@nova.edu
(954)262-1499
72. The best way to get in touch with me is via email.
Thank you for your time.
If you have questions please
feel free to contact me.
The best way to get in touch with me is via email.
Hinweis der Redaktion
Hello Everyone, My name is Julie Sarpy Kroger and I am the new Library Liaison for the NSU CEME. I will be going over the resources you have available to you. I will be presenting today along with my colleague John Reynolds, emerging technologies librarian, because I am new to medical sciences and still getting acquainted with some apps and mobile features.
Before I start - I want to let you know where you can find a copy of this presentation so you don’t have to worry about writing down everything or remembering everything. From the HPD Library Homepage which is www.nova.edu/hpdlibrary. * Click on the icon for Osteopathic Medicine.
This is the landing page for Osteopathic Medicine. From there you will click on tab marked clinical affiliates to access your resources.
I know all of you know how to search a Library catalog, but I wanted to point out that a majority of our collection is electronic. There are collections of eBooks in several difference databases, however you should be able to find out if we have a book, in print or electronic regardless of the database it is located in using the Library Catalog. You can perform a search of the Library catalog using the search widget on the homepage. A very popular resource is Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine so I will use that as my sample search. (Ex:) You can just type “Harrison’s” into the search box.
In the results list you will see the icon in the right column which indicates that it is an eResource. However, you will need to click on the title of the Resource to reveal the full catalog record. That is where the hyperlink will be to access the resource.
You will notice in the record that this title is available in both Access Medicine and Access Pharmacy. You can click on either link to enter the content of the book, however please realize that depending on the database you click on you will be entering different collections so, you will see more books on those subjects. (EX) Access Pharmacy will have mostly Pharmacy titles while Access Medicine will have more medical titles.
Before you access any of the electronic resources we subscribe to (pay for) you will need to authenticate. Because these are paid databases, they basically want to know who is paying for your access, so that is what the authentication does. It identifies that you have access via the NSU subscription
You are now into what is essentially a (1) table of contents of the book. If any of you have read an ebook before on a personal device such as your Kindle, Nook or iBooks, you notice it does not look the same and it will not act the same. One of the reasons is that this ebook is just one of many ebooks that are in the Access Medicine collection. In addition to the text and images of the print version of the book, it also has additional “bonus” material such as (2) Textbook updates, any (3) multimedia/videos that accompany the book and (4) an Interactive Self Assessments. You can also use the text/search box to search for a specific topic anywhere in the book.
For some of the “premium or customized” features of Access Medicine you will need to create your own personal account. This account will allow you to access to the app, use the interactive self assessments, and save and download images directly to Powerpoint. To create your own account, simply choose “Create a Free MyAccess profile” from the dropdown menu in the upper right corner of the menu.
In the results list you will see the icon in the right column which indicates that it is an eResource. However, you will need to click on the title of the Resource to reveal the full catalog record. That is where the hyperlink will be to access the resource.
You see that it’s available as an e-book and click here to gain access.
It opens to the book and from there you can click on the pdf to read your desired section.
This second tab is our Full Text Finder. This will conduct a search across all of our databases to see if we have electronic access to the full text of a particular journal, for any period of time.
**Full Text Finder is pretty good about locating titles using the acronym. If you get no results and you are using an acronym, redo the search by spelling out the abbreviated words.
Here is the result from our Full Text finder. It is a list of all of the databases that we subscribe to where we have the full text for the New England Journal of Medicine for any period of time.
Full Text Delay means that database will not allow access to the full text of that journal for this most recent period of time.
Finally please note that one of the options says “Publisher’s Site”. This means that in addition to getting access to the full text via some of our other databases we also purchase it directly from the Publisher. This allows access to additional features of the journals website.
Now, I will click on the hyperlink that says “Publisher’s Site”
Now we are on the homepage for the New England Journal of Medicine. Just to reiterate, because we license the content from the publisher we get to take advantage of the other features on the site. You can narrow down the site by clicking on “Specialties and Topics” or By clicking on {Articles & Multimedia} in the bar across the top of the screen, You will see links to “Videos and Images in Clinical Medicine” , Interactive Medical Cases, Quick Take Videos and Audio Interviews & Summaries etc.
The 3rd tab is used to search PubMed. When you click on PubMed you will see 3 options:
~Quick Search – which will bring you to the main PubMed search screen
~Journals (which you can use to look up full journal titles/acronyms) and allows you to limit your search to Journals referenced in the NCBI Databases
~MeSH – will allow you to search the controlled vocabulary thesaurus for Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Now I am going to click on the link for [Quick Search] to perform a Sample Search in PubMed
Now I will show you a sample search for an article using the PubMed database.
We want to find the full text for this article Preventing Cardiac Implantable Electronic Device Infections. Insert title into search bar and click search.
You should see a list of possible matches. PubMed will put the one that it thinks matches most closely in a box at the top of the results screen. To get to the full text options click on the article title to open the whole record to see the FindIt button.
**Sometimes you will see other full text links. These are provided by the Publisher and may not work. You will experience varying degrees of success. Sometimes if you are on campus and the site has picked up our IP address and detected we have a subscription, sometimes you will get luckily. Generally, I try the links if all else fails. The FindIt button is what you are looking for. That is our Link Resolver. It will connect you with the full text if we have access in any of our subscription databases.
Click on the FindIt @ NSU button.
This will open up this “middle-man” page. You will see a brief citation up at the top and a number of links under. You may see other links with direct links to the article. Sometimes they work, sometimes they do not. I am not going to click on it, because the 3 links you will always see are the 3 options. Full-Text Finder will search to see if we have subscribe to that journal electronically. NovaCat will search to see if we subscribe to or have that journal in print. The last option is ILLiad or Interlibrary Loan, this is the service you would use to request the full text of an item we do not have electronically.
So I am going to click on the link for [Full Text Finder]
Here will see a list of databases that we subscribe to that has the full text for that journal for ANY period of time. From your citation, the year you need is 2015 and that year is within this resource’s range.
You can try to find the article yourself based on the original citation from PubMed by navigating the archives list to locate the Year, Volume, Issue and Page, but I sometimes find it easier (especially when the article is ePub ahead of print) to search the database for the title.
Sometimes, ClinicalKey requires you to create a personal account to access certain content. This time, I was able to just click on the PDF icon and it automatically downloaded the PDF.
Now let’s try this search again pretending that the article was not available through the Find it at NSU button.
We start again by entering the title Preventing Cardiac Implantable Electronic Device Infections into the search bar.
We select the first citation. The one closest to our search terminology.
Note the find it button. But we are not going to select it. We are pretending that the button is not there.
If the article was not available electronically, you can request it through interlibrary loan.
Simply login to illiad with your credentials.
You will notice that it automatically populates the form with the information the ILL office will need to locate the item. However, the most important questions is the first question which is What is your campus affiliation. Residents are considered “Clinical Faculty” as far as the Library is concerned.
When the article comes in you will not be sent the PDF in an email. You will be emailed a link to log back into this Illiad system. You will log into your account and need to click on the {Electronically Received Articles} option in the VIEW section of the left hand column
You would be able to click on the transaction and retrieve your article.
Now here are some more resource links.
When you click on ALL NSU Databases you can browse by Subject or by Material Type. I just wanted to show you this to make you aware of some of the other resources you have access to that you might be interested in. EX: In the SUBJECT category….Chemistry, Education, Law, Psychology and the MATERIAL TYPE Grants, Statistical Sources and Tests & Measurements
Q Bank for the USMLE, COMLEX and Medical Certification and Medical Subjects
This is what you would have access to if you do NOT log into the app,
clinical lectures as podcasts , presented by experts at the nation's preeminent teaching institutions that will help provide better care for patients.
Some can be used for CME credit
Clinical Key – access to thousands of books and journals – you can also search by topic
A point of care app – key points, background info, incidence & prevalence, prevalence, diagnosis, treatment, outcomes
Brief, bullet points, quicker than UpToDate, less detail
The new web version of Clin Pharm works well on a tablet but has display problems on a phone so you may want to use this for mobile
Through Unbound Medicine - antibiotics & infectious diseases, diabetes and HIV guides from Johns Hopkins
An app version of the Medical Letter – peer reviewed evaluations of drugs – new and old, plus treatment guidelines and CMEs
An excellent app for info on complementary and alternative medicines – if a patient tells you they are taking l-theanine from green tea, this might be a good place to look. We also have the web version if you don’t need the app.
One of the most highly regarded language learning programs. We have the first level of 30 languages.
The Red Book - the app version doesn’t require internet access, except to get updates – excellent for diagnosis, treatment and prevention – updated regularly
The stat!ref app gives you access to the book that the HPD library subscribes to through Stat!Ref, plus a variety of calculators
I’m sure you’re familiar with his one – you have access to the mobile version through the HPD Library – many institutions are not able to provide that. They are strict on making sure only authorized users are using it, so you’ll have to verify your affiliation once a month by going to the UpToDate web version on the HPD Library website.
Some features of UpToDate you might not be familiar with
You might get a reminder from UpToDate that looks something like this. Don’t follow these directions.
Instead, go to www.nova.edu/hpdlibrary, then the Osteopathic Medicine guide, then this big ol’ hard to miss link. You might need to log in to your personal UpToDate accoiunt, too, depending on the last time you cleared your cache & cookies in your browser
The VisualDX app lets you enter symptoms based on their appearance – rashes, lesions, part of body – plus other info, to get a set of possible diagnoses