Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Election Information Professional of the Year 2010 has two winners.

Gert Meijdam, founder and owner of the business information company STIPP, Deventer, became the Information Professional of the Year in 2010, judged by a four-member professional jury. 


The prize this year has been issued for the fifth time, is set by Prissma, the largest division of NVB (Dutch society for professionals in the Library, Information and Knowledge Sector).Meijdam is founder and director-owner of the Deventer-based information company STIPP, he has managed to build an established name in the information world of profit (publishers, businesses) and nonprofit (public institutions, libraries, etc.).
(read more about Gert here in a Google -translate version of the official text)



The second prize was won by me! The "EBSCO Publieksprijs" as part of the election of the Information Professional of the Year 2010


This year for the second time the Audience award, a check for 1,000 euros sponsored by EBSCO Information Services. Internet peers could vote for one of the six nominees for the price Information Professional of the Year 2010. In total, more than 700 votes were issued and Guus van den Brekel, Medical Information Specialist and Coordinator Electronic Services of the Central Medical Library of the University Medical Center Groningen, was the winner of the "Audience Award" with 40% of the vote. Hans-Peter Meulenkamp of EBSCO Information Services congratulated me over the phone, as I was at the EAHIL2010 Conference in Estoril, Portugal at the time. 
See the YouTube video about it made by Wilma van den Brink

Monday, July 12, 2010

Webicina Toolbar Updated & available from Webicina itself!

For me it wasn't difficult to decide the work on a Toolbar for Webicina, which I believe to be -at this point- the best & most up to date Medical web 2.0 collection of resources, blogs and tools around for Medical Professionals and Empowered Patients. 
And together with PeRSSonalized Medicine -a free, easy-to-use aggregator of quality medical information that lets you select your favourite resources and read the latest news and articles about a medical specialty or a medical condition in one personalized place.
it perfectly merges into a very usefull tool to keep up for many people.
Berci now added the link to the Webicina Toolbar on both pages at the right side.

Webicina Toolbar Now on Medical Professional & Empowered Patient Page!

Webicina's content:
For Medical Professionals: 19 Specialities

Step-by-step guides about the web 2.0 tools you need to use.


For Empowered Patients: 15 topics


PeRSSonalized Medical Conditions

  •  PeRSSonalized AIDS & HIV      
  •  PeRSSonalized Allergy       
  •  PeRSSonalized Arthritis       
  •  PeRSSonalized Asthma       
  •  PeRSSonalized Autism       
  •  PeRSSonalized Cancer       
  •  PeRSSonalized Crohn's disease       
  •  PeRSSonalized Depression       
  •  PeRSSonalized Diabetes       
  •  PeRSSonalized Dialysis       
  •  PeRSSonalized Epilepsy       
  •  PeRSSonalized Fitness       
  •  PeRSSonalized High Blood Pressure       
  •  PeRSSonalized Infectious Diseases       
  •  PeRSSonalized Leukemia       
  •  PeRSSonalized Multiple Sclerosis       
  •  PeRSSonalized Parkinson's disease       
  •  PeRSSonalized Pregnancy       
  •  PeRSSonalized Psoriasis       
  •  PeRSSonalized Stroke       
  •  PeRSSonalized Transplantation       
  •  PeRSSonalized Weight loss        
  •  PeRSSonalized Women's Health 

PERSSonalized Medical Specialities:

  • PeRSSonalized Anatomy       
  • PeRSSonalized Anesthesiology       
  • PeRSSonalized Cardiology       
  • PeRSSonalized Dentistry       
  • PeRSSonalized Dermatology       
  • PeRSSonalized Emergency Medicine       
  • PeRSSonalized Genetics       
  • PeRSSonalized Geriatrics       
  • PeRSSonalized Midwifery       
  • PeRSSonalized Nephrology       
  • PeRSSonalized Neurology       
  • PeRSSonalized Nursing       
  • PeRSSonalized Nutrition       
  • PeRSSonalized OB/Gyn       
  • PeRSSonalized Ophthalmology       
  • PeRSSonalized Otolaryngology 
  • PeRSSonalized Pathology      
  • PeRSSonalized Pediatrics 
  • PeRSSonalized Physical Therapy       
  • PeRSSonalized Plastic Surgery       
  • PeRSSonalized Psychiatry       
  • PeRSSonalized Radiology       
  • PeRSSonalized Rheumatology       
  • PeRSSonalized Sexual Health       
  • PeRSSonalized Surgery
PeRSSonalized Others:

  • PeRSSonalized PAHO       
  • PeRSSonalized Pharma      
  • PeRSSonalized Pharma Companies 

Other Tools available for Webicina Resources:

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

"DISCOVERING NEW SEAS OF KNOWLEDGE" : EAHIL2010 Must Read Advice!


How open are Medical Library Conferences? How easy is it to get the material discussed or presented there? And is it supposed to be available all the time and for free?
In this age of Open Acess, web 2.0 and the expectancy of the "users" -being us librarians, spoiled with Google:-) one would assume that much(if not all) is freely available via Conferences websites and/or social media. Why then do I find it hard to find the extra info about those events, including papers and slides and possibly even webcasts? Are we still not into the share-mode and overprotective to one's own achievements, or is it a genetic defect just being too modest as a librarian, satisfied with a quiet role in the background?
Please anyone, fill my gaps of knowledge in this. Is it ignorance by me, or is there a real issue? Hiding content behind a registration I cán understand, but it is missing the actual elementary necessity of trying to keep all medical librarians up to date in their struggle for basic "survival" and/or finding the new (digital) divides we need to tackle in this day and age of "medical information on the loose" on the web.
We need to share more. For the EAHIL you can see or find much of the content at:


The experience of the 12th EAHIL Conference in Lisbon and Estoril was impressive. It seems every year the EAHIL community gathered together for that one week gets more and more intense, socially and content-wise.
The Continuing Education Courses of this year touched the actual needs of many librarians. I want to bring a few special ones under attention.
  • Scholarly publishing and open access | Eloy Rodrigues
    A general overview of evolution and current situation of scholarly communication system and scholarly publishing but will focus on Open Access (OA) to promote research visibility, usage and impact. Open Access origins, objectives, definitions, routes (“Green” and “Gold”) and types (“gratis” and “libre”) will be presented and discussed. The most relevant and recent developments of Open Access will be also analyzed
  • BioMedical web nuggets | Friedhelm Rump
    General search engines serve the biomedical librarian little in a scientific context. Special search engines come closer to fulfilling this task. However, there are great differences between them. New ones are emerging every week. Some last some vanish as quickly as they appeared. There are now many full text search engines and repositories, RSS-feeds search engines, RSS-feeds repositories and gadgets. In addition technical platforms for embedding search engines or make them available while reading a scientific text for example in a WORD-file or a webpage have become available. Likewise there are addons to search engines with astounding facilities in terms of gaining instant access to information. The question poses itself: What is good and will last, what is new and going strong. This workshop introduces the up and coming sites and software as well as it reviews the proven. In addition insight into how the somewhat more challenging applications are made the best use of, will be provided. The course will be highly up-to-date, as the author will monitor the Internet for new arrivals until a few days before the course will actually be given. All contents will be available to take home on a CD-ROM set in HTML, so it will be possible to start browsing right from there.
  • Writing for scientific / academic publications | António Vaz-Carneiro
    Introduction and needs assessment; the basic structure of the scientific paper (IMMRD); supporting information (tables, figures and references); practical exercise: appraisal of published papers; closure and satisfaction inquiry)
  • Strategic planning for health information libraries: a Quantum workshop | Gabrielle Derriks
    This session offers techniques and a hands-on approach to evaluating the current strengths and weaknesses of your information services, aligned against the goals of your health institution. This interactive session helps participants to formulate innovative strategic alternatives for the future and to create an action plan to apply the appropriate resources and tactics. Strategic planning is a management process requiring ongoing assessment and review. In order to be successful it needs to involve all stakeholders of your institution: health librarians, managers, physicians, nurses and other health care professionals, all have a role to play.
  • PICO workshop | Hans Ket and Marion Heijmans (all day)
    The learning goals of this CEC are:
    - being able to use the PICO-format to formulate clinical questions and deriving search terms from it
    - evolving your search skills, both in quality and in efficiency
    - presenting the search process in a clear and objective way
    - (pro-)actively working in a clinical setting
    - strengthening your confidence
    - sharing PICO-experiences with other information specia¬lists/cli¬nical librarians/medical librarians
    - combining live presentations of PICOs with good theory about the background of the PICO and evidence based medicine.
    This workshop will be highly interactive. At the end of this course you will have done several PICOs and you have picked up a lot of tips, tricks & expertise, which will make YOU the PICO-search-expert! ZINES ADEUS in Lisbon on the 15th of June!
  • Navigating the evidence base: planning and delivering effective library services | Andrew Booth


    This brand new half-day workshop is designed to allow health librarians to experience for themselves the practical realities of Evidence Based Library and Information Practice (EBLIP). Working in small groups, organised around common library scenarios, participants will follow the five steps of a revised Evidence Based Practice process (named “EBLIP Five Point Zero” following the EBLIP5 Conference in Stockholm, 2009); Articulate, Acquire, Assess, Agree and Adapt. Essentially a team process, in contrast to the individual practitioner model favoured by evidence based medicine, this variant is best experienced rather than simply observed.

    This course aims to provide only a brief narrative commentary from the presenter linking participants through the five stages of EBLIP Five Point Zero, supported by follow-up resources, tools and references to further reading. This leaves the focus on experiential learning in rapidly-constituted action learning sets. In this way the course, which requires no previous knowledge of evidence based library and information practice (although a basic grasp of evidence based healthcare may be useful), will simulate how teams of librarians make evidence based decisions in the workplace. Practical benefits of the course will include a broad perspective of the potential offered by EBLIP, a realistic experience of the process and a transferable model for adoption in the participants’ own libraries.
    Course Outline:
    • Charting the EBLIP Process
    • Articulating Your Question
    • Acquiring Disparate Evidence
    • Assessing the Evidence Base
    • Agreeing a Plan of Action
    • Adapting and Adopting
    • The Journey Travelled
Two courses were offered in English as well as in Portuguese:

I am trying to get as much of the course materials online, but so far I only got the CD from Friendhelm Rump and my own course as Netvibes Public page. Below you will find a few Slideshares, Posters and other social media.

Maybe when Course lecturers read this they can send me their materials if they are prepared to share and publish it?

Absolutely the best Opening lecture I have ever attended at EAHIL was
"The evolution of knowledge and its impact on bioethics" | by Alexandre Quintanilha, Universidade do Porto (abstract)
The slides are available, but the delivery of the presentation was impressive with great global overview of bio-ethic topics.

  • Opening Lecture - Alexandre Quintanilha Abstract  
Here are my tips for must-reads:
  •  Karen Buset - Use Web 2.0 to learn Web 2.0 - develop competences for the next generation library.   Full Text
  • Liz Brewster - "Read this, it's good for you!": using qualitative methodologies to explore service user needs and strategic aims.   Full Text
  • Medical Information Library & Knowledge: MILK or discovery of scientific information on health through social labeling: Connotea and CiteUlike.
    Julia Alonso-Arevalo, Helena Martin-Rodero, Carlos Lopes, Maria Garcia-Puente, Angels Carles-Pomar (Spain)   Full Text
  • Blair Anton - An Embedded Informationist Service Model: expertise follows electronic resources wherever patrons are.   Full Text 
  • Sheila Corrall - Positioning the Health Librarian as a Blended Professional: a framework for development.   Full Text
  • Tamas Doszkocs - Integrating Semantic Search, Federated Search and Biomedical Knowledge Base Technologies for Improved Services by Medical Libraries  Full Text
The Posters
52 posters were available. As test we are uploading them to the EAHIL2010 Slideshare and link them to the overall EAHIL group. Hopefully the amateur pictures will be replaced in many cases by the digital version.
The current number of views seems to indidate that the posters find many viewers easily.



The Social Element
Many of the presentations need a good read afterwards, now made easier with the complete slides and papers available!
I found a wonderful social tool to share great meals and cookery: YUMIT, an original Spanish initiative, thanks to @bibliovirtual.
A lot of information about EAHIl2010 can be digested via social media:



Monday, July 05, 2010

NARCIS - National Academic Research and Collaborations Information System

In a recent email it was explained that NARCIS, National Academic Research and Collaborations Information System now offers RSS-feeds for search results, or even a widget you can embed in your website or blog
I think it is interesting to keep up what is entered into NARCIS by or about the UMCG.
So the search "universitair medisch centrum groningen" OR UMCG", gave me 101 results divided in 6 tab-results
Every set of results can be saved as RSS feed, embedded or added to your Favourites, EXCEPT the "ALL Sources".
I tried to merge these 5 rss-feeds into one via Pipes.Yahoo.com and it seemed to work.
You can see the result on the UMCG Web Presence Scan Public Page; Publications Tab

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Primal Pictures demo in the UMCG

Tomorrow in the Traverse room (CMC.Z3) in the UMCG a demo session of Primal Pictures (access for RUG&UMCG) is organised by the Central Medical Library with help of Wolters Kluwer Health (with thanks to Connie Munsters Regional Sales Manager Benelux, Eastern Mediterranean, Southern Africa, Medical Research, Ovid Technologies B.V.)
The demo will be delivered by Mike Smith of Primal Pictures.
Some info:
Primal Pictures compared to other anatomy products:

        -         Primal Pictures model is made using high resolution MRI scans of real cadavers  (not based on drawings)
-      Users have several ways of navigating the models. They can rotate in 3 dimensions whilst adding and subtracting structures. They can move through the model in Axial, Saggital and Coronal slices whilst at the same time comparing the images to MRI scans .With some views they can drill down in a virtual dissection.
-          Depth of information, 40,000+ images, slides, animations and movies
-          Sports injuries modules for shoulder, knee and foot and ankle
-          Extensive Surgery titles with films of operations
-          Students and staff of the University are allowed to load images and animations into programmes for access by other students and staff of the University e.g. lecture notes in PowerPoint (i.e.  downloading is not only limited to instructors)
-          Remote access is included within the license agreement
-          Ease of management due to online access (no dvd’s or cd’s involved)
-          Most medical schools in the UK are using Primal Pictures
-          Primal Pictures is written by well known anatomists from the Imperial College London, Leeds University, University of Bristol

Near future
-          Copy web link facility: save a link directly to any image so teachers can embed these links within their teaching modules; students can just click on the link to be taken directly to that image in Primal
-          Primal are just about to release a Dental version of the Head and Neck written in conjunction with King's College London with 3D views of dental conditions and intraoral injections with clinically relevant text – link to film http://www.primalpictures.com/demo.aspx?f=Head_dentistry.swf