• The National Library of Medicine (NLM) , on the campus of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, is the world's largest medical library. (lu.se)
  • NLM is a leader in biomedical and health data science research, and the world's largest biomedical library. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The digitisation of manuscripts from the Royal Canonry of Premonstratensians at Strahov (the Strahov Library) continued in 2020 with another 34 volumes, predominantly deposited under the shelf mark DA III. (manuscriptorium.com)
  • Its Booth Family Center for Special Collections includes rare books, manuscripts, prints and the Maryland Province Archives. (georgetown.edu)
  • For the Wellcome Library this forms part of a larger ambition to digitise and make freely available over 50 million pages of historical medical books, archives, manuscripts and journals by 2020. (wellcome.org)
  • The marks readers left on books help librarians and researchers answer important questions about how books were used by the people who owned them. (wustl.edu)
  • NNLM Book Discussion offers librarians and library staff interested in better understanding health issues faced by people in the communities that they serve an opportunity to explore topics with other professionals and earn Continuing Education Credit. (nnlm.gov)
  • Carnegie Mellon University Libraries has developed CAMPI, a new web application that uses computer vision to assist librarians processing digital photograph collections. (libraryjournal.com)
  • Original resource at: Wellcome Library. (loc.gov)
  • The Wellcome Library and Jisc today announce nine partner institutions whose 19th-century book collections will be digitised and added to the UK Medical Heritage Library (UK MHL), an online resource for the study of the history of medicine and related sciences. (wellcome.org)
  • The content will be available on multiple platforms to broaden access, including the Internet Archive, the Wellcome Library and Jisc Historic Books. (wellcome.org)
  • They, along with works from the other partner institutions, will be transported to the Wellcome Library in London where a team from the Internet Archive will undertake the digitisation work. (wellcome.org)
  • The project will build on the success of the US-based Medical Heritage Library consortium, of which the Wellcome Library is a part, which has already digitised over 50 000 books and pamphlets. (wellcome.org)
  • We are delighted that the Wellcome Library team has been able to identify such valuable collections, which will be digitised to a high standard, freed from the confines of their original format and made openly available for teaching, learning and research. (wellcome.org)
  • The UK MHL initiative started in 2013 when the Wellcome Library embarked on a project with the Internet Archive to digitise their collection of 19th-century medical books. (wellcome.org)
  • Today, we're going to look at some of the ways readers of the past have interacted with books held in special collections. (wustl.edu)
  • And while you should certainly feel free to leave marks in your books, never add any to books that are already in special collections! (wustl.edu)
  • The National Medical Library in Prague has provided access to five early printed books or their binder's volumes from its collections. (manuscriptorium.com)
  • Digitization projects in Maryland, Montana, and Houston, TX, present a glimpse of current trends in digital archives, as state and city libraries work to create collections that reflect local and regional history. (libraryjournal.com)
  • During the American Library Association (ALA) Virtual Annual Meeting, Lauren Geiger, metadata librarian, and Emily D. Harrison, digital projects specialist, both from Mississippi State University Libraries, discussed how to ensure that accessibility in digital collections is not limited to discoverability. (libraryjournal.com)
  • Athens-area history buffs are invited to dig in to the University of Georgia Special Collections Libraries archives with two free community events planned for Saturday, Sept. 30. (uga.edu)
  • Novelist and cookbook author Frances Mayes will be a featured guest for a plated dinner Saturday, Oct. 28, and poet Percival Everett will read his award-winning work on Thursday, Nov. 2, both at the UGA Special Collections Libraries Building in Athens. (uga.edu)
  • Scholars and advocates working to preserve coastal communities in Georgia for future generations will visit the University of Georgia Special Collections Libraries this month. (uga.edu)
  • Take a tour through some of the legendary locations of Athens' house parties, at the University of Georgia Special Collections Libraries this fall. (uga.edu)
  • This display will open on Friday, Sept. 1, at the Special Collections Libraries Building on the University of Georgia campus, just in time for fans to celebrate the start of the 2023 football season. (uga.edu)
  • An exhibit at the UGA Special Collections Libraries features pottery, shell tools, and other relics found during archaeological digs on St. Catherines Island. (uga.edu)
  • Those historical records, photographs, and other memorabilia are on display at the University of Georgia Special Collections Libraries, as part of a campus-wide celebration of the 75th anniversary of the museum. (uga.edu)
  • National Library of Medicine LocatorPlus contains books, journals and audiovisual materials in the National Library of Medicine's collections. (bu.edu)
  • Recommended for school and public library collections where there is an interest in this topic. (schoollibraryjournal.com)
  • 2019). This can make discovering open access books difficult for readers (and libraries planning their collections). (sfu.ca)
  • Explore our extensive general collection or work with our specialized legal, medical, scientific, bioethical and theological collections. (georgetown.edu)
  • Blommer Science Library houses part of the science collections for the departments of biology, chemistry, computer science, mathematics and physics. (georgetown.edu)
  • By pooling their collections the partners will create a comprehensive online library. (wellcome.org)
  • We are pleased that these nine institutions have chosen to add their valuable collections to the Medical Heritage Library. (wellcome.org)
  • It was co-designed with Research Libraries UK and is informed by an Academic Advisory Group to ensure that the best collections are included. (wellcome.org)
  • As a publicly supported institution, the Library generally does not own rights to material in its collections. (loc.gov)
  • Housed within the Library is one of the world's finest medical history collections of old and rare medical works. (lu.se)
  • What brings you to Columbia's Rare Book & Manuscript Library? (columbia.edu)
  • The University of Georgia's Hargrett Rare Book & Manuscript Library is celebrating the life and career of late Georgia Football Head Coach and Athletic Director Vince Dooley this fall with a new museum exhibit, Legacy: Vince Dooley, 1932-2022 . (uga.edu)
  • Z-Alerts allow you to be notified about the availability of new books according to your search query. (zlibrary-global.se)
  • A search query can be a title of the book, a name of the author, ISBN or anything else Read more about Z-Alerts . (zlibrary-global.se)
  • Find books, articles and more: The libraries at Lund University have a wide range of tools for literature search. (lu.se)
  • In addition to the library catalogue LUBcat, there are Lund University portal for accessing the library collection of e-journals, e-books, and databases as well as other search services that you can use for finding essential medical and health literature. (lu.se)
  • It was developed from the MeSH - Medical Subject Headings of the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM) with the purpose of permitting the use of common terminology for searching in three languages, providing a consistent and unique environment for the retrieval of information regardless of the language. (bvs.br)
  • For additional information and contact information for many of the partner organizations, see this archived capture of the World Digital Library site from 2021. (loc.gov)
  • BMJ 2021;374:n2061 commissioned jointly by the Medical individual to societal levels. (cancercentrum.se)
  • A biography about a groundbreaking judge and a nonfiction narrative of how Black patients experience racism in the health care system have been named the year's best books dedicated to issues of social justice, as winners of the 2023 winners of the Lillian Smith Book Awards, presented by the University of Georgia Libraries. (uga.edu)
  • In Proceedings of the Iowa State Medical and Chirurgical Society. (google.nl)
  • by Mark L. Wolfe and Library of Congress. (upenn.edu)
  • The Veterans History Project (VHP) at the Library of Congress collects, preserves and makes accessible the firsthand recollections of U.S. military veterans who served from World War I through more recent conflicts and peacekeeping missions, so that future generations may hear directly from veterans and better understand what they saw, did and felt during their service. (loc.gov)
  • John P. Snodgrass (AFC 2001/001/xxxx), Veterans History Project Collection, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress. (loc.gov)
  • The trilingual and structured vocabulary DeCS - Health Sciences Descriptors - was created by BIREME to serve as a unique language in indexing articles from scientific journals, books, congress proceedings, technical reports, and other types of materials, as well as for searching and retrieving subjects from scientific literature from information sources available on the Virtual Health Library (VHL) such as LILACS, MEDLINE, and others. (bvs.br)
  • LEYES - Latin American and Caribbean Basic Health Legislation 13/09/2005The information contained in the LEYES data base was extracted mostly from the registers of the 'Index to Latin American Lagislation' maintained by the Hispanic Law Division of the Library of Congress of the United States of America, with the exception of constitutional provision and health codes. (bvsalud.org)
  • Journal of Medical Humanities. (wikipedia.org)
  • Open Book Publishers , Open Humanities Press and punctum books are all monograph publishers that publish fully open access books with no book processing charges for authors. (sfu.ca)
  • Lauinger Library houses humanities, social sciences and business materials and U.S. federal documents. (georgetown.edu)
  • The Library collects materials and provides information and research services in all areas of biomedicine and health care, as well as works on biomedical aspects of technology, the humanities, and the physical, life, and social sciences. (lu.se)
  • John Bracken, Micah May, and Shaneé Yvette Willis discussed DPLA's new partnerships, recent projects, and the new Palace Project ebook platform during the "Digital Public Library of America: A Look Ahead" session at the American Library Association's 2022 Annual Conference. (libraryjournal.com)
  • Nonetheless, authorities within the Home Affairs Department proceeded to order that all 10 books be placed in the "closed stacks," meaning library visitors will need to request a librarian to access the books. (hrw.org)
  • The Bioethics Research Library offers a wide range of books, journals, newspaper articles, regulations, codes, government publications and more on biomedical and professional ethics issues. (georgetown.edu)
  • The Hinari programme, established by WHO together with major publishers, as a part of Research4Life programmes in order to provide the eligible health and medical institutions from low and middle-income countries with free of charge or low-cost online access to the full-text of priced health and biomedical sciences publications from the leading international scientific journals, books, databases. (who.int)
  • The official course literature consists of the course book, "Fundamentals pf Biomedical Optics", and laboratory instructions . (lu.se)
  • Meeting the challenge: Illinois State Library's long-range program for library development in Illinois, 1972-77. (upenn.edu)
  • BENEFIT FOR THE LIBRARY: This book will be a valuable addition to the library's collection. (berghahnbooks.com)
  • Hong Kong authorities should immediately reverse a decision to place 10 children's books with LGBT themes in the "closed stacks" of public libraries, Human Rights Watch said today in a letter to Hong Kong's Home Affairs Bureau. (hrw.org)
  • In correspondence Human Rights Watch reviewed dated June 15, 2018, Hong Kong's Home Affairs Department responded to a citizens' group complaint regarding 10 children's books that feature diverse families and gender expressions. (hrw.org)
  • Dr Claire Blacklock, co-founder and trustee of African Hospital Libraries, will be cycling between the Oxford NHS hospitals and university health libraries next month. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • She aims to raise sponsorship funds for the charity which provides medical books for hospitals in Africa, as well as raise awareness of the inequalities in accessing up to date and relevant health information for the global health workforce. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • Books have been donated to the charity from Oxford University Press as well as Health Books International. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • Dr Blacklock is passionate about raising awareness of the lack of access to the latest health books in less developed countries. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • Senior Lecturer at Flinders University's College of Medicine and Public Health, Leïla Morsy visited the RBML as part of her work on The Medical Color Line, a project that examines how powerful philanthropies in the early twentieth century restructured medical education and underfunded Black medical schools, excluding Black doctors from the medical field and creating long-lasting legacies that persist today. (columbia.edu)
  • Particularly relevant to this part of the story are letters that illustrate the crisis developing in medical education, violated civil rights for African Americans, and the impending public health consequences. (columbia.edu)
  • In honor of LGBTQ+ History Month, stop by the lobby of Blaisdell Medical Library to explore our display of books representing the spectrum of LGBTQ+ health and take part in our PRIDE coloring book station. (ucdavis.edu)
  • Sponsors include the UC Davis Library and the following groups at UC Davis Health: UC Davis LGBTQ+ Health Initiative, the Vice-chancellor and Dean's LGBTQ+ Advisory Council, Improving OUTcomes Conference, PRIDE Employee Resource Group, and the School of Medicine Gender and Sexual Diversity Student Interest Group. (ucdavis.edu)
  • Located on the Georgetown University Medical Center campus, Dahlgren Memorial Library is the health sciences library for the university and MedStar Georgetown University Hospital. (georgetown.edu)
  • Maternal and Child Health Knowledge Base and Library Collection is part of the National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health . (georgetown.edu)
  • This will include works relating to the medical sciences, consumer health, sport and fitness, as well as different kinds of medical practice, from phrenology to hydrotherapy. (wellcome.org)
  • Identifying these priority nature of these agents and thus iden- tive begun in 1999 to upgrade national agents will help facilitate coordinated tify specific preparedness activities for public health capabilities for response planning efforts among federal agen- public health and medical response to to acts of biological terrorism, the cies, state and local emergency them. (cdc.gov)
  • Health Hazard Evaluations/Hazard Evaluations and Technical Assistance (HETA) reports are the result of the NIOSH hazard evaluation and technical assistance program which provides, upon request, medical, nursing, and industrial hygiene technical and consultative assistance to Federal, state, and local agencies, labor, industry, and other groups or individuals to control occupational health hazards and to prevent related trauma and disease. (cdc.gov)
  • The library was developed by WHO headquarters and BIREME of the Pan American Health Organization, in collaboration with WHO regional offices as part of WHO's strategy for knowledge management and sharing in global public health. (who.int)
  • NLM is a national resource for all U.S. health science libraries through a National Network of Libraries of Medicine. (lu.se)
  • the Medical Library sought to redress the imbalance by improving the supply of information to health workers outside the capital. (bvsalud.org)
  • Patricia Flatley Brennan, R.N., Ph.D., leads the National Library of Medicine (NLM), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). (medlineplus.gov)
  • Hiding books from free public access which feature lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) characters sends a stigmatizing message that LGBT content is inherently inappropriate. (hrw.org)
  • As well as our partners Jisc and Research Libraries UK, we will be working closely with our Academic Advisory Group to produce an online resource that is both a repository for a superb wealth of content and an effective research tool for a broad range of users. (wellcome.org)
  • In addition, in comparison to journals, academic books cost more to produce and rely more on sales of physical versions for cost recovery or profit. (sfu.ca)
  • More than 80,000 journals, e-books and other information resources. (who.int)
  • It contains books, theses, brochures, reprints and periodical publications written by brazilian authors, including articles published in foreign and non specialized journals, the objective is to produce the National Memory in Odontology. (bvsalud.org)
  • Our holdings range from books and journals over 10 centuries old to the latest electronic genomic descriptions of the virus causing this awful pandemic. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Since 2000, Dr. Steve Albrecht has trained thousands of library employees in 25+ states, live and online, in service, safety, and security. (stevehargadon.com)
  • The Commission interviewed nearly 2000 witnesses from medical officers to missionaries in 30 cities across India. (nls.uk)
  • UK Medical Research Council (MRC) published a takes account of recent developments framework for researchers and research funders on developing and evaluating complex interventions in in theory and methods and the need to 2000 and revised guidance in 2006.1-3 Although these maximise the efficiency, use, and documents continue to be widely used and are now impact of research. (cancercentrum.se)
  • Boston University is a member of the Boston Library Consortium (BLC) . (bu.edu)
  • The Boston Library Consortium is a cooperative association of academic and research libraries whose purpose is to share information resources so that the collective strengths of the group advance the research and learning of the members' constituents. (bu.edu)
  • The Consortium Card program extends direct borrowing privileges at Consortium members' libraries to students, faculty and staff from participating academic institutions. (bu.edu)
  • Boston University Medical Campus students, faculty and staff can obtain a BLC Consortium Card at the Alumni Medical Library Reference Desk, Monday - Friday, 8:30 am - 5:00 pm. (bu.edu)
  • Those who are not part of the Boston University Medical Campus can request information about the Consortium Card program from the reference staff at their home libraries. (bu.edu)
  • You can come into the library to fill out the application in person, or download this form to apply for a Boston Library Consortium Card . (bu.edu)
  • The Boston Library Consortium card is required for Boston University students, faculty, and staff when visiting or borrowing books from other Boston Library Consortium member Libraries. (bu.edu)
  • The Consortium Card is an identification card, and card holders may be asked to register at every Consortium library visited. (bu.edu)
  • You may return borrowed materials to any Consortium member library, but you will be responsible for any overdue charges at the home institution. (bu.edu)
  • Materials borrowed from Consortium libraries can be returned to the Alumni Medical Library. (bu.edu)
  • Failure to do so will result in the loss of borrowing privileges at all Consortium libraries. (bu.edu)
  • Harvard University's Countway Library of Medicine is not a member of the Boston Library Consortium, but has an extensive cataloged collection including historical materials in the Center for the History of Medicine. (bu.edu)
  • I am writing a book about the history of the exclusion of African Americans from medicine from the 1700s to today and its contemporary consequences. (columbia.edu)
  • The day begins with a Local History Expo at the Oconee County Library, featuring mementoes from UGA Athletics history, including items associated with the Georgia vs. Auburn rivalry to correspond to the football game scheduled for that day. (uga.edu)
  • This indispensable reference book is an invaluable resource for history enthusiasts, students, and anyone seeking a deeper understanding of North America's intricate journey through time. (schoollibraryjournal.com)
  • A List of Books on the History of Science. (google.nl)
  • This collection is also included in the Library of Medical History collection. (brill.com)
  • Books consulted for information on the history of Romania and antisemitism: "Nationalist ideology and antisemitism. (bvsalud.org)
  • TOME (Towards an Open Monograph Ecosystem) is one initiative that provides grants to university and college presses to support publishing open monographs.The original 14 participating institutions each agreed to fund 15 total books over the 5 year pilot period. (sfu.ca)
  • National Library of Medicine (U.S. (nih.gov)
  • National Library of Medicine (NLM), U.S. (lu.se)
  • National Library of Medicine (NLM) , som finns på National Institutes of Healths campus i Bethesda i Maryland, är världens största medicinska bibliotek. (lu.se)
  • Publishing open access increases the visibility, accessibility, and geographic reach of your research, whether for books, book chapters or journal articles. (sfu.ca)
  • It was the university's main library from 1891 to 1970 and now serves as a unique and attractive event space. (georgetown.edu)
  • Works on food and nutrition will also feature: around 1400 cookery books from the University of Leeds are among those lined up for digitisation. (wellcome.org)
  • Last week, 200kg of books were donated from medical students and Oxford Brookes University libraries. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • 1(pp180-181) The report advised the two remaining Black medical schools, Meharry Medical College and Howard University School of Medicine, focus their curriculum on sanitation, hygiene, and preventative medicine rather than scientific medicine, in contrast to the scientific research ambitions the report laid out for white schools. (columbia.edu)
  • The library of Baylor University School of Medicine was one of the forerunners of the Texas Medical Center Library. (tmc.edu)
  • A team at the University of Iowa recently used familiar medical technology-a computerized tomography (CT) scanner-to do just that. (libraryjournal.com)
  • Carl Grant, former president of Ex Libris North America and interim dean of the University of Oklahoma Libraries, this summer became managing director of The Revs Institute, a Naples, FL-based not-for-profit dedicated to the research and historical study of automobiles. (libraryjournal.com)
  • The University of Georgia Libraries will host the two newest members of the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame with special events open to the community later this year. (uga.edu)
  • Current Boston University students, faculty, and staff may borrow books directly from the Boston College, Brandeis University, and Northeastern University Libraries using their Boston University ID (Terrier Card). (bu.edu)
  • The Edward Bennett Williams Law Library supports the research and educational endeavors of the students and faculty of the Georgetown University Law Center. (georgetown.edu)
  • The Georgetown University Qatar Library serves students studying at Georgetown's School of Foreign Service and other campuses for Education City in Doha, Qatar. (georgetown.edu)
  • The library of the University College of London, for example, is integrated within the GU-Q library. (georgetown.edu)
  • The libraries of six universities have joined the partnership - UCL (University College London), the University of Leeds, the University of Glasgow, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, King's College London and the University of Bristol - along with the libraries of the Royal College of Physicians of London, the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Surgeons of England. (wellcome.org)
  • It is produced by the Caribbean Net and coordinated by the MedCarib Net Coordinating Center, The Medical Library, University of the West Indies, Mona, Kingston - Jamaica. (bvsalud.org)
  • To help you find out more about the range of services on offer at UCL, visit Library Services' Getting Started web page , which includes short films on the essentials of using UCL Libraries and searching Explore. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • By working closely with the partner institutions to build the UK Medical Heritage Library, we are converting books into searchable data so that users can explore every aspect of 19th-century medicine and develop new insights into this period of unprecedented medical discovery. (wellcome.org)
  • The Friends of Richmond Beach Library wants to offer a heartfelt thank you to all the people from the community who joined us on Saturday, November 16, 2019 to make our annual Holiday Book Sale such a rousing success. (shorelineareanews.com)
  • Pursue research at Georgetown's libraries, which include more than 3.5 million holdings. (georgetown.edu)
  • Woodstock Theological Library , one of America's oldest Catholic theological libraries, contains about 190,000 circulating volumes, 700 periodical titles, 17,500 rare book holdings and an up-to-date reference collection. (georgetown.edu)
  • In October 1915 it became known for a while as the "Red Cross and Order of St John War Library", when these two organizations took over the financial burden. (wikipedia.org)
  • Medical humanism and the innovative methods adopted in Italian universities prompted many doctors and students of medicine to travel to Italy. (st-andrews.ac.uk)
  • Many publishers, universities, libraries, and funders are working on options to make publishing open access books more sustainable. (sfu.ca)
  • Research4Life is a public-private partnership of the WHO, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, United Nations Environment Programme, World Intellectual Property Organization, Cornell and Yale Universities and the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers. (who.int)
  • For example, if there is a print book available for sale with one ISBN and an open access ebook version with a different ISBN, it is not always clear or easy to find the alternate version. (sfu.ca)
  • All of their books are free to read online or as a PDF download, and readers can choose to purchase physical copies or ebook copies. (sfu.ca)
  • The General Education Board adhered to the Flexner Report guidelines and supported sweeping changes in medical education at white institutions but provided hardly any funding to the Black medical colleges towards scientific medicine, such as state-of-the art laboratories, new buildings, and salaries for staff to teach and research full time. (columbia.edu)
  • To find out how you can benefit from open access to research, see our library web pages and Open Access blog . (st-andrews.ac.uk)
  • by Association of Research Libraries. (upenn.edu)
  • REFERENCE: I will refer to this book for my research/teaching work. (berghahnbooks.com)
  • Take a look inside the Maker Hub at Lauinger Library to learn how you can tap into your creative energies to research, design and produce exciting and innovative prototypes. (georgetown.edu)
  • Library partnerships have indeed served several purposes in Africa. (bvsalud.org)
  • Medicine changes and no one can remember everything, so libraries are an important facility to have in hospitals. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • So I recommend adding a selection of survival medicine books to your prepper library to help you get through any situations that may arise. (elementbushcraft.com)
  • The project's focus is on books and pamphlets from the 19th century that are on the subject of medicine or its related disciplines. (wellcome.org)
  • The Faculty of Medicine has libraries both in Lund and in Malmö. (lu.se)
  • Sponsorship money raised from Dr Blacklock's cycle challenge will go towards building a resource centre at the hospital which will not only have books but space for people to study, for groups to collaborate together and eventually have internet access. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • Large-scale institutional access for viewing with individual login capability: $499 (hosted either at Library 2.0 or in Niche Academy). (stevehargadon.com)
  • All-access annual passes include unlimited access to the recordings of all of Dr. Albrecht's previous Library 2.0 webinars, plus live and recorded access to his new webinars for one year. (stevehargadon.com)
  • But what about open access books? (sfu.ca)
  • While scholarly monograph publishing has been slower to adopt open access due to a number of factors, proponents of open access recognize the importance of expanding Open to include book publishing. (sfu.ca)
  • Most of the additional countries accessing OA books are located in the Global South, where access to expensive subscription-based scholarly literature is more limited. (sfu.ca)
  • In order for books to be published open access, publishers need to find alternative models to cover production and distribution costs. (sfu.ca)
  • In this model, funds from partner libraries will go to making all new releases open access, rather than purchasing individual titles for a single collection. (sfu.ca)
  • Even if the entire book is not going to be open access, if you are contributing a chapter to an edited volume, ask your editor about submitting your chapter manuscript to a repository, like SFU's Summit. (sfu.ca)
  • The earliest of them is the collection of German medical texts, printed in Frankfurt am Main around the middle of the 16th century (shelf mark T 452), whereas the other printed books come from the period between the end of the 16th century and the end of the 18th century. (manuscriptorium.com)
  • The Library asks that researchers approach the materials in this collection with respect for the culture and sensibilities of the people whose lives, ideas, and creativity are documented here. (loc.gov)
  • This chapter explores the circulation, collection and use of Italian books by French medical doctors in the Renaissance. (st-andrews.ac.uk)
  • The report argued that medical schools should have stronger admission standards, detailed and uniform accreditation requirements, that they be attached to teaching hospitals, and use medical curricula based in science and laboratory work. (columbia.edu)
  • The report was funded by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and co-developed with the American Medical Association. (columbia.edu)
  • Or if you're interested in trying your hand at publishing, the Public Knowledge Project supports the Open Monograph Press , an open-source platform for managing and publishing scholarly books. (sfu.ca)
  • Al-Kitāb fī siyāsat al-khayl (The book on tending horses) is a short work on horsemanship by an unknown author. (loc.gov)
  • The introduction to this work states that it is an abridgment of Ghāyat al-itqān (The limit of improvement), a 17th century medical text by Salih ibn Nasrallah al-Halabi ibn Sallum (died 1670). (loc.gov)
  • The bookable Project Room on Floor 1 is available for group work and can be booked by students. (abdn.ac.uk)
  • NOTE: "The Prepper's Library Series" is a work in progress. (elementbushcraft.com)
  • Also included in these documents are recommendations for personal protective equipment and clothing, work practices, engineering controls, hazard notification, medical surveillance, and recordkeeping. (cdc.gov)
  • Whether your focus is on a specific discipline, interdisciplinary areas or emerging fields, our libraries offer academic resources, a maker hub, collaborative spaces and more. (georgetown.edu)
  • and 11) environmental and occupational medical resources sheet. (cdc.gov)
  • The book offers a very differentiated examination of authoritative socio-philosophical literature, which can be helpful for anthropologists and sociologists, certainly also for psychologists, to reflect on our being in the world and to make it describable. (berghahnbooks.com)
  • Information for NHS staff wishing to join a UCL library can be found on the U CL Library Services website, including eligibility and which library to join. (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Information on borrowing and returning books, including borrowing allowances for UCL staff and students is available from the UCL Library Services website . (ucl.ac.uk)
  • Application for basic grants under library services for Indian tribes and Hawaiian natives program. (upenn.edu)
  • Application for special projects grants under library services for Indian tribes and Hawaiian natives program. (upenn.edu)
  • FY 1991, application for basic grants under library services for Indian tribes and Hawaiian natives program. (upenn.edu)
  • MSI Information Services, an unparalleled platform providing independent reading and information services to K-12 professionals and library leaders in the US. (libraryjournal.com)
  • We offer extended library services and support for students, employees, and affiliated researchers. (lu.se)
  • has begun to improve its library services. (bvsalud.org)
  • He revised the journal several times adding notes about medical journal articles and updates regarding some of his patients seen in other circumstances. (scmemory.org)
  • Procedures vary amongst libraries and must be followed to utilize this service. (bu.edu)
  • This chapter explores how they acquired Italian books for their courses and collected them as mementos of their journey. (st-andrews.ac.uk)
  • The book explores what functions physical diseases and peculiarities had in early modern satires and how satire was considered as a form o. (iitkgp.ac.in)
  • This journal is significant because Johnson's depictions give a firsthand view of medical practices during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras when prescribing whiskey, eggs, and opium were standard treatments. (scmemory.org)
  • STUDENT REFERRAL: I will regularly refer my students to the book to assist their studies. (berghahnbooks.com)
  • Gelardin New Media Center in Lauinger Library gives students space and equipment to create multimedia projects. (georgetown.edu)
  • while staff and students in the country's one medical school in Harare were relatively well supplied. (bvsalud.org)
  • Demand was huge: it distributed over six million books and magazines, including new books (purchased by the public) and special editions printed by publishers specifically for this purpose (e.g. (wikipedia.org)
  • Approximately 15 million pages of printed books and pamphlets from all ten partners will be digitised over a period of two years and will be made freely available to researchers and the public under an open licence. (wellcome.org)
  • Our libraries are open to the public with limited service. (lu.se)
  • African Hospital Libraries has had good support in the past including receiving five British Medical Association Information Fund book grants and a partnership agreement with Book Aid International. (oxfordmail.co.uk)
  • The Becker Medical Library website will be undergoing scheduled maintenance beginning at 6:00 a.m. on Sunday, October 1st. (wustl.edu)
  • The medical cases and farm accounts typically include the names of individuals involved and thus may be useful for genealogical purposes. (scmemory.org)
  • Opportunities for social participation include: Silver Lake Singers, town libraries, book clubs, and Gibson social programs. (who.int)
  • by inc Government Studies & Systems, Urban Libraries Council, and United States. (upenn.edu)
  • Books printed prior to 1501 are known as incunabula, from the Latin word for "swaddling clothes," and are considered examples of the earliest stage of book printing in the West. (wustl.edu)