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January 2021 Winter Study Break

Explore Healthy Living @ Himmelfarb's January Study Break Guide for ideas to keep your mind and body healthy! January's list includes a (socially distanced) outdoor fitness activity at Montrose and Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C. as well as virtual activities like the National Bell Festival.

To improve your life at home, learn how to create a hygge home see if one of the achievable New Year's resolutions sounds like the right one for you in 2021. And, if you'd like to get out of the house, check out how the National Park Service plans to recognize Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday on January 18.

There is no doubt that 2020 has been a challenging year and that life has changed dramatically for all of us.  Through these changes, we're grateful for the GW community.  If you're interested in giving back both to and as part of the GW community, please explore these options:

GW COVID-19 Emergency Response Fund: The GW COVID-19 Response Fund supports the critical needs of patients, frontline care providers, staff, residents, and students. Gifts will help meet the most urgent needs, including:

  • Research efforts to develop vaccines, innovative treatments, and advance our understanding of the pandemic’s effect on society
  • Protective equipment to ensure the health and safety of GW's frontline team members
  • Patient resources to support the individual needs of the community, including outdoor exam tents and mobile testing sites
  • Technology to increase telemedicine and distance learning capabilities for our future doctors and care providers
  • Essential resources for our frontline caregivers to continue practicing, including hot meals and alternative lodging

Give-A-Gift from GW's Honey W. Nashman Center for Civic Engagement and Public Service: Give-A-Gift is a signature event and tradition at George Washington University where all members of the GW community -- students, faculty, staff and alumni -- provide holiday gifts to families in Washington, D.C.   For 25 years, the GW community has stepped forward to support our neighbors with gifts for the holidays. This year due to COVID-19 restrictions, we are unable to collect and distribute physical gifts, so this year we are hosting a fundraiser to continue our support of the D.C. community. Please contribute to this GW tradition!

Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library is happy to provide access to the Open Textbook Library (OTL), a repository of nearly 800 open access e-books. The OTL is provided by the Open Education Network, a collection of approximately 120 higher education institutions, including the Washington Research Library Consortium, of which Himmelfarb Library is a member. The OTL seeks to provide a comprehensive repository for open access textbooks and is continually adding more titles from its partner institutions. 

An open textbook is a print or digital text with an open copyright license that makes it free for anyone to use. They are usually written by faculty authors or other educators who aren’t finding the book they need and take it upon themselves to create a new resource. Authors can receive financial compensation for their work, either with a grant from their university or by open access providers, such as OpenStax. However, the most common return is less financial and more about “the satisfaction and convenience of having a textbook that’s tailor-made for your course, and affordable for your students” (Schmieder, 2018).  

Open Access has no bearing on the quality of information presented. As the Open Education Network puts it, they “leave quality judgements to faculty with expertise in the subject area.” Faculty interested in using open textbooks should review them the same way they do any other potential textbook. In addition to undergoing review during publication, the Open Education Network also invites faculty to review open textbooks. 

In addition, the Open Education Network provides resources for students, faculty, librarians, and others who are interested in writing their own open textbooks. They also offer publishing support for patrons of member institutions (including Himmelfarb patrons!). 

Free and electronic open access resources are especially valuable right now, at a time when physical access to libraries is restricted for so many, and when buying textbooks may be a financial strain for students, faculty, and institutions. Open access resources can help fill the gaps where existing resources are lacking. 

The OTL includes a broad range of subject areas, including Medicine, Engineering, Education, and  Law. You can view the health science titles here or view the full collection here. The books can also be found in the Himmelfarb catalog. You can consult the Open Education Network’s FAQ page for more details. If you have additional questions about the quality of open access resources, or how to obtain OAR beyond the Open Textbook Library, you may contact imroberts@gwu.edu

References

Open Education Network website. Accessed October 21, 2020. https://open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/faq 

Schmieder, E. 4 Questions authors are asking about open textbooks. Textbook & Academic Authors Association website. August 21, 2018. Accessed October 21, 2020. 

ORCID iD. Scopus Author Profile. NIH Biosketch. Web of Science ResearcherID...

Keeping up with your author profile in numerous systems can be a daunting task. Have you ever changed your name? Published under variant forms of your name? Moved from one university to another? If any of these are true, chances are that you may have multiple author profiles in multiple databases. This means that when people look at these systems, they don’t necessarily see the full scope of your research history and scholarly output. Let the Himmelfarb Library help you with our new Researcher Profile Audit Service!

What is a Researcher Profile? A researcher profile is a system that connects you to your scholarly output. There are a wide range of research profile systems--there are author identifier systems such as ORCiD, ScieENcv, Scopus, and Web of Science’s ResearcherID; there are search engines with author profiles such as Google Scholar; and there are social networks for researchers such as Mendeley and ResearchGate. Having accurate researcher profiles is important for differentiating your works from other authors with similar names, helping you to comply with funder requirements, and demonstrating your impact for promotion and tenure purposes. For more information, explore our guide on Researcher Profiles

Why Might I Need an Audit? Navigating the multitude of systems can be challenging. Many researchers begin the process of setting up profiles, but then abandon the process due to a lack of time. Others have changed institutional affiliations and need to have profiles merged. And still others would benefit from having profiles linked in order to maximize time management. An audit of your researcher profiles in prominent systems can help to differentiate you from other researchers, allow you to quickly demonstrate your impact for professional advancement, and help you to build a professional network. 

How We Can Help If you are a faculty member or student with the School of Medicine and Health Sciences, the Milken Institute School of Public Health, or the School of Nursing at the George Washington University, the Himmelfarb Library would like help you take control of your researcher profile using prominent systems such as ScieENcv, ORCiD, Scopus, and Web of Science’s ResearcherID. We can help you with setting up profiles, merging multiple profiles within the same system, and more. We can also assist to ensure that your profiles are complete and help to streamline the process of maintaining your profile.

Interested? Submit a Consultation Request and we'll get back to you within 2-3 business days

Peer Review Week2020 marks the sixth annual celebration of Peer Review Week! The goal of this annual event is to acknowledge the importance that the peer review process plays in helping to maintain scientific quality. Peer review can be the most thankless part of the scholarly communications lifecycle--for reviewers it can be time-consuming but likewise entail minimal recognition. However, peer review is also central to helping ensure that things such as study design, data integrity, and the interpretation of results are clearly vetted. Consequently, peer review weeks strives to showcase the work of editors and reviewers, advance best practices, and highlight the latest applications.

 

This year’s Peer Review Week theme is “Trust in Peer Review” and the objective is to underscore why peer review is central to the process of creating trust worthy content. As a result of the COVID-19 crisis, 2020 saw the rapid growth of preprint servers such as medRxiv, bioRxiv, and others. While the growth of preprint servers has helped to expedite the transmission of scientific information, the rapid rise in the dissemination of content prior to the peer reviewed process has likewise resulted in a greater potential for error. What will the relationship between preprints and peer-reviewed publications look like going forward? This will likely be one of the biggest questions in scholarly communications for 2021 and beyond. 

 

Looking for some ways that you can help to celebrate Peer Review Week September 21st-September 25th? 

  • Teach a student how to structure an effective review. 
  • Recommend a younger colleague as a reviewer. 
  • Track your work as a peer reviewer through your publons or ORCID iD  researcher profile. 
  • Or just finalize the review that has been sitting on your desk. 

 

Happy Peer Review Week! 

PDF downloadWe recently noticed an issue with displaying some journal article PDFs and contacted the vendor.
We learned that the issue was not vendor-related, but was caused by the browser.  If you experience issues in accessing PDFs via Chrome, please try an alternate browser (e.g. Firefox, Edge, Safari, etc.).
As always if you run into issues with any resources in our collection, please let us know as soon as possible.

The Washington Research Libraries Consortium Loan Service (CLS) is back in service. CLS allows Himmelfarb users to borrow items at no cost from other DC area academic libraries. Loans are typically 5 weeks in length and can often be renewed if needed.

To request a book or other physical item from another library, use Health Information @ Himmelfarb and select the option to search Articles + GW Consortium Catalog as shown below:

Once you’ve found an item you’d like to borrow, click the title in the search results to open and check How to Get It (as shown below) to see if another library in the consortium has a copy available. Then sign in to see the option for the Consortium Loan Request form.

Use your NetID to sign in and then select Consortium Loan Service Request.


Fill out the form designating a date when you will no longer need the item if it is required within a certain amount of time.  Please note that while service has been restored, WRLC’s courier service is currently only running twice a week. This means items may take about a week for delivery. We anticipate that delivery times will improve as more libraries open and restore services.

You will receive a notification via email when your item arrives at Himmelfarb. If you currently do not have physical access to Himmelfarb Library, you may pick-up your items in the Ross Hall courtyard (9am - 7pm, Monday - Thursday, 9am - 5pm, Friday, and 1pm - 6pm, Saturday - Sunday).  Please contact the Circulation Desk at 202-994-2962 just before you arrive in the Ross Hall courtyard.  

Nursing students at VSTC can request to have their items shipped to the VSTC Library for pickup. Either contact Circulation staff or request VSTC delivery in the Comments section of the request form.

Stacy Brody

Stacy Brody is a Reference and Instruction Librarian at the Himmelfarb Library. Recently, she published “UMLS users and uses: a current overview” in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association based on her research during a fellowship with the National Library of Medicine. We asked Stacy what advice she might have for other early career researchers looking to publish their research. 

 

Q: How did you get the idea for your research? Was it a case report?

A: I conducted the research as part of my fellowship year at the National Library of Medicine. The general concept was proposed by my advisors and was part of a larger effort. 

 

Q: How did you structure your research?

A: We conducted a scoping review pilot project. We did not quite know, at first, how to go about collecting the information we wanted. I had heard of systematic reviews and meta-analyses, but we did not have a question that could be answered by these methods. We were interested not in the results presented in research articles but in the methods and tools used. We needed a landscape view, a map of the research. We wanted to know what was out there! There are many types of reviews, and the scoping review method fit our needs.

 

Q: How did you find time to research and polish your publication?

A: Fortunately, the bulk of the research and initial writing were built into the fellowship year. I found it difficult to make time, after leaving that program, to keep tabs on the progress of the work, which grew to incorporate additional research data.

 

Q: How did you select a journal for your research?

A: We chose an association journal. We knew members of that association would be interested in learning about our work. We did not consider impact factor - only relevance to the journal audience.

 

Q: Was your research ultimately published by the first journal that you approached?

A: Yes - the topic was a good fit for the journal.

 

Q: Is there anything that you learned about the publication process that you would like to share with other researchers?

A: Team members may be more or less involved at different parts of the process - and that is ok! I was heavily involved in the beginning of the work. My collaborators were able to continue after I left the fellowship, and they brought on additional hands as needed. What was important was being able to share files and make sure team members knew how/where to find documents needed to finalize the piece. 

 

Be sure to 

  • Document. Document. Document. 
  • Save files in a drive team members can access even after you leave
  • Name files so that your collaborators know what they are!

 

Q: How did you work with your professor or adviser during the publication process?

A: My colleagues handled interactions with the publisher. They alerted me when I needed to create an account with the publisher.  

 

In previous publishing experience, where I have been sole or lead author, I have learned that I will need to

  • ensure my ORCID iD is linked, 
  • review manuscripts before publishing, 
  • name and store files so that it is easy to upload (and sometimes re-upload images) to meet standards, and 
  • When necessary, make sure the article is deposited in PMC (if you are NIH-funded, for instance).

 

Q: Is there anything that your professor or adviser did during the publication process that you found helpful?

A:I was thankful my adviser handled most of the publication process. With multi-authored papers, it can be challenging to make sure everyone has completed their piece of the puzzle, whether it is signing off on a final draft before submission or creating accounts with the publisher. Having one person oversee that (and prod people to get things done!) is helpful! She was also able to ensure the publication was published in accordance with NIH guidelines, as the work was completed while I was a fellow.

AAMC: Journals for COVID-19 ResearchDo you have important COVID-19 related research, but are unsure of where to publish? The Medical Education Research Scholarship and Evaluation (MESRE) Section of AAMC’s Group of Education Affairs has put together an annotated bibliography of journals targeting COVID-19 related research to help!

Many of the nearly 50 journals listed in the bibliography either have special calls for articles or are accepting COVID-19 related pieces. This bibliography provides information about special issues, submission guidelines, and more.   The goal of the MESRE is to "enhance the quality of research in medical education and to promote its application to educational practice." and additional information is available on the MESRE website.