Monday, June 20, 2022

AW Library Newsletter - June 2022: Nurses Choice - Evolving Clinical Evidence - Plagues in the Arts & Literature - Order Articles through PubMed

   

Ascension Wisconsin Librarians support your health care decisions with evidence-based research and full text resources.  



"Smell the sea and feel the sky
Let your soul and spirit fly." 
                           --Van Morrison

Catch up on the latest news from Ascension Wisconsin Library Services:

 

       Online vs. Print

       New Request Form for Library Services

       PubMed Order Articles Feature


       Revisiting Camus' Plague in Pandemic Times

           Dance Plagues and Red Shoes

 
The AW Diabetes Education Newsflash Newsletter for June 2022
Questions, comments, or search requests, contact Your Ascension Wisconsin Librarians: 

 Michele Matucheski   &   Kellee Selden

Our AW Library website is available 24/7.

Friday, June 17, 2022

Nurses Choice Recommended Reading - June 2022

 

View this page as a PDF


June 2022

See what your fellow nurses are reading!
Browse this month's round-up of 10 top articles from Lippincott's prestigious list of nursing journals.

Pride Month

Comparing the Nurse Work Environment, Job Satisfaction, and Intent to Leave Among Military, Magnet®, Magnet-Aspiring, and Non-Magnet Civilian Hospitals
JONA: Journal of Nursing Administration, June 2022

Evidence-Based Critical Care Education for Oncology Nurses
Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing, July/August 2022

New Mothers' Perceptions of Pressure to Breastfeed
MCN, The American Journal of Maternal/Child Nursing, May/June 2022

A Day in the Life of a Hospice Nurse
Home Healthcare Now, May/June 2022

Systematic Review of Ostomy Care Pathways
Advances in Skin & Wound Care: The Journal for Prevention and Healing, May 2022

Management of primary hypertension in rural populations
The Nurse Practitioner, June 2022

An Examination of Factors Associated With Student Resiliency
Nurse Educator, May/June 2022

Anticoagulation Monitoring in the Intensive Care Unit
Critical Care Nursing Quarterly, April/June 2022

A standardized approach to enteral medication administration
Nursing2022, May 2022

Chronic disease self-management: Putting patients in the driver's seat
Nursing made Incredibly Easy!, May/June 2022


* Questions about access, contact your Ascension Wisconsin Librarians

 Michele Matucheski        Kellee Selden

Thursday, June 16, 2022

Revisiting Camus' Plague in Pandemic Times

 


In the course of sending out eTOCs, I stumbled upon the following editorial from the NEJM this week:

Klass P. "It's Hardly Credible" - Medical Readers and Literary Plague. N Engl J Med. 2022 Jun 11. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp2119103. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 35687048.  Link to this article.

 

It's written by a physician re-reading The Plague by Albert Camus as an adult, after having assigned it to students in a medical humanities class in 2021-- an apt topic for pandemic times.  Although she read the novel in high school, she could not remember much about it.  Now re-reading it as an adult, she read it with her "doctor brain" and couldn't figure out why the attending physician in the novel never prescribed the sulfa drugs, the antimicrobials of the day that would have cured people and stamped out the plague.

It's interesting to read her response, knowing what she knows, and how doctors think and the conflicts between the literal vs. literary mind.  Of course, maybe Camus can be forgiven -- He was a writer and a philospher who wrote a magnificent book about existentialism, not a physician keeping up with cutting edge treatments for bubonic plague.    After all -- There was no internet, no PubMed in 1947.  He probably did not have access to Index Medicus, or the French equivalent. 

It's also fascinating to know that others have contemplated this question about why Dr. Rieux, the protagonist of the novel, never prescribed available sulpha drugs to patients during this outbreak in the 1940s.  Were these meds even available in his part of the world?  Were supply chains so disrupted during WWII that he would not have gotten them even if he tried to procure them?

This man even goes so far as to call it literary malpractice:

Deudon EH. A case for literary malpractice: the use of Camus's The Plague in American medical schools. Linacre Q. 1988 May;55(2):73-80. doi: 10.1080/00243639.1988.11877958. PMID: 11650149.  PubMed link.


She also cites the World Health Organization's Plague Manual as  evidence for what the world knew about treating bubonic plague at the time.  

Klass's piece is an interesting article, revisiting medicine in literature with a what-would-you-do take on it.  Of course, if Dr. Rieux had treated patients with standard therapy for the times, we would not have the existential story where things get so bad, and people are pushed to the brink that you see their true characters ...  I suppose he could have set the story in another time period BEFORE sulpha drugs?

Take a look ... and tell me what you think!

Saturday, June 11, 2022

Online vs. Print

Online vs. Print

Books and journals have long since moved online. The Ascension Wisconsin (AW) Libraries provide materials in both formats. While electronic resources have many advantages, print still has a place. 

All of our scholarly journals are online these days.   In general, we prefer e-books for the many reasons listed below. However, we might opt for print if the online version is too expensive, or if the item is not available online. 

These days, most of our print books are older editions.  Newer eBook editions can often be found online through Clinical Key, Access Medicine or R2 Library.  


Credit and thanks to Jennifer Barlowe, Medical Librarian at Ascension Borgess in Michigan for developing the chart above.

Questions, Comments, or Requests?  Contact your Ascension Wisconsin Librarians:

Michele Matucheski  & Kellee Selden


Friday, June 10, 2022

New Request Form for Library Services

 


Ascension Library Services has developed a new online form for requesting services: 

Ascension Medical Library Request Form

Use this form to request:

  • Literature Searches / Research
  • Articles 
  • Book Chapters
  • Book Loans 
  • and general questions
Tell us who you are and what you need, and your request will be routed back to your Ascension Wisconsin Librarians for fulfillment.

This central point for questions allows the national Ascension Library Team to cover for one another when we are out sick or on vacation. 

Give it a try - We guarantee speedy service!



Look for the Request Forms Tab on the AW Library Home


Of course, you are still welcome to contact your AW Librarians directly for these and other requests:       

          Michele Matucheski or Kellee Selden.

Thursday, June 9, 2022

PubMed Order Articles Feature



Did you know that you can use PubMed to order articles directly from Ascension Wisconsin Library Services?  

  • If you use the PubMed links on our Ascension Wisconsin (AW) Library pages, you’ll tap into our fulltext journal offerings.  In other words, this lets you tap into the additional content we get through subscriptions and licenses -- at no cost to you. 
  • In addition, you'll be able to easily order articles that are not otherwise available through our current access--at no cost to you.
  • PubMed allows you to easily and quickly send the full citation and your request directly to your AW Librarians.    Then we can tap into our interlibrary loan networks, if needed, to get you the article(s).


Be sure you are using a networked computer at work, or utilizing remote access / VPN for authentication purposes.  


PubMed with LinkOut url for Ascension Wisconsin

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?otool=ahslib


Here's how it works:

At the Ascension Wisconsin PubMed screen type in the PMID for the article below: 32676912 and hit search to arrive at this article:



If you can’t get to the fulltext through the publisher icons, you can also try the Ascension Logo to see if we might have fulltext available through another database, collection or source.  




If there are no other options for getting to fulltext, you can always order the article through the Request this Document link.  




The form magically pulls in the citation info--saving you time!

All you have to do is fill in your contact info and click on ORDER.


The form will be sent to one of our AW Librarians.  If you so choose, you’ll also get a copy of the request.


We will do our best to get the article for you either from our own collections or by tapping into our interlibrary loan networks--at no cost to you.  



Questions or Comments?  Contact your Ascension Wisconsin Librarians:

Michele Matucheski  & Kellee Selden


See our other Tutorials for Getting to FullText


Thursday, June 2, 2022

RadioAdvisory: The Evolving World of Clinical Evidence

 


About this Episode

The life sciences part of health care isn't just drugmakers and medical device companies—data and evidence coming from life sciences is critical to the entire health care ecosystem. In this episode, Rachel Woods sits down with Advisory Board's Solomon Banjo and Pam Divack, and SVP of Optum Life Sciences Lou Brooks, to talk about the evolving role of evidence and how evidence impacts all parts of the health care ecosystem.


Brought to you by Ascension Wisconsin Library Services.  

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Dance Plagues and Red Shoes

 

The Red Shoes by Kate Bush (1990s throwback)

Last month, I read an article by BBC News about a real life dance plague (aka choreomania) that inspired Hans Christian Anderson's classic The Red Shoes.

Here's a quote to whet your appetite or just help explain why it's relevant for today:

Ecstasy and anger

It was perhaps inevitable that the dancing plague regained popularity now. The last two years have yielded feverish interest in the many pandemics that have gone before us, from the Black Death to the Spanish Flu. We have looked to them not only for comparison, but also, seemingly, to reassure ourselves that all epidemics eventually end. Within that, something tenuously classed as a plague where the contagion isn't sickness, but movement was always going to be alluring. As Welch acknowledges, one of the things lost during lockdown was the communality of dancing: that exquisite feeling of being physically proximate to hundreds of other people, everyone carried by music that commands the muscles and turns a sea of strangers into fellow travellers bound by shared experience.


A Time to Dance, a Time to Die: The Extraordinary Story of the Dancing Plague of 1518 by John Waller

In case you were wondering, a quick and dirty search of PubMed brought up a handful of articles on "choreomania OR dancing plague."


There are many interpretations of The Red Shoes out there.  [Just Google it, and you'll see!] To me, The Red Shoes was less about moralizing and punishment for the vanity of wanting a pair of pretty dance shoes, and more about getting swept up in something you can't control -- like addiction, or possession, or even just loosing your footing in a meaningful life.  If you don't have plans for your own life, someone else will and it may not be to your liking.   


If you are fascinated with this tangent of story as medicine, check out Clarisa Pinkola Estes' classic book, Women who Run with the Wolves.  The author is a Jungian analyst and cantadora [Keeper of the Stories] and includes a long chapter on The Red Shoes and a compelling interpretation.    It is one of my all-time favorite books. ;-)