Tuesday, May 30, 2023

WHSLA website redesign progressing

The WHSLA website redesign is coming along and we wanted to keep you in the loop about how things are progressing. 

The Jan/Feb 2023 survey we sent out asking how you use the WHSLA website, helped inform the work we are doing. Just a reminder that the top responses about what you use the website for included membership lists, blog, and bylaws. 

Structure of website: This spring, the committee spent time looking at other health science library association sites, including Midwest Chapter MLA, HSLI, and MHSLA. There were some commonalities with the structure that we liked and are hoping to implement on the new WHSLA site. In addition, we found ways to make things clearer, like officer and committee lists that deliniate voting and non-voting roles. 

Feedback on new structure: To give WHSLA members a chance to give feedback on the new structure, we will be sending out a survey before July 1. 

Updating logo: Stay tuned for more on the WHSLA logo. It could be a simple addition of color or broader redesign. 


 


Thursday, May 25, 2023

Workplace Wellness for Library Staff

Workplace wellness for library staff isn't just one thing. Luckily a resource from Bobbi Newman collates tips for employers, support for LIS staff, articles, and more: Workplace Wellness for Library Staff

Thank you to WHSLA member Dora Davis for sharing this great blog post with resources

DaisyFig, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons


June learning opportunities through NNLM

NNLM is hosting a wide variety of virtual classes and learning opportunities this June. Check the calendar and sign up here

Preply.com Images, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons


Monday, May 15, 2023

Book review: American Sirens : The Incredible Story Of The Black Men Who Became America’s First Paramedics

Thank you to Robert Koehler for submitting this book review. 


American Sirens : The Incredible Story Of The Black Men Who Became America’s First Paramedics  by Kevin Hazzard


Before the early 1970s, there were few ambulance companies in this country, and almost none that featured trained personnel.  If someone had an emergency, most often the call was answered by the police, who had no medical training.  They would simply put the individual, unsupervised, into an unequipped ambulance and race off to the nearest hospital.  One well known physician, a Pittsburgh anesthesiologist renowned for developing CPR, decided that what this country needed were trained paramedics who could deliver care immediately when summoned to a medical emergency.

This physician, Peter Safar, had one problem, though; no one in Pittsburgh’s government was interested in his proposal, preferring the cheaper status quo.  Undeterred, in 1967 he approached Freedom House, an organization set up to help meet the medical needs of the city’s Black community, and convinced them to help him recruit Black men whom he could educate to become the country’s first paramedics.  Once fully trained, these sixty-some individuals became members of Freedom House Ambulance Service, working in Pittsburgh’s predominately Black Hill area.

In Kevin Hazzard’s engaging page turner, American Sirens, he profiles a number of the individuals who received their training under Safar, and the continued racism they faced while providing services in the years before Freedom House Ambulance Service was finally disbanded and blended into a city-wide service employing the blueprint perfected by these trained paramedics.  Also featured is Nancy Caroline, the young physician who became the Medical Director of Freedom House’s program.  She would later write a textbook, Emergency Care In The Streets, that became the go-to reference used in developing EMS programs across the country.  American Sirens is a captivating read about how these pioneers transformed health care in the United States.


Friday, May 12, 2023

Can ChatGPT Accurately Answer a PICOT Question?: Assessing AI Response to a Clinical Question

 Candise Branum 1Martin Schiavenato

Abstract

Background: ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence (AI) text generator trained to predict correct words, can provide answers to questions but has shown mixed results in answering medical questions.

Purpose: To assess the reliability and accuracy of ChatGPT in providing answers to a complex clinical question.

Methods: A Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome, and Time (PICOT) formatted question was queried, along with a request for references. Full-text articles were reviewed to verify the accuracy of the evidence summary provided by the chatbot.

Results: ChatGPT was unable to provide a certifiable response to a PICOT question. The references cited as evidence included incorrect journal information, and many study details summarized by ChatGPT proved to be patently false, including providing fabricated data.

Conclusions: ChatGPT provides answers that appear legitimate but may be factually incorrect. The system is not transparent in how it gathers data to answer questions and sometimes fabricates information that looks plausible, making it an unreliable tool for clinical questions.

Read the full article.

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Supporting End-of-Life Care: Death Doulas & Death Cafes

 Supporting End-of-Life Care: Death Doulas and Death Cafes with Carrie Forbes, MLS

Webinar from the NNLM Region 1.  Original air date April 18, 2023.

A relatively new option for the dying and their families, death doulas began seeing a rise in popularity over the past few years. A Death/End of Life Doula (EOLD) is a non-medical professional role that has experienced rapid growth & media attention in recent years. A Death/EOLD provides non-medical, holistic, physical, emotional, and spiritual support for the dying and their loved ones, before, during and after death. The role has been termed “the missing piece of the hospice mission… and a valuable supplement to end of life care.” This class will briefly review the history of Death/EOLDs, how they support the dying and their loved ones. The class will also explain and demonstrate how libraries can offer “Death Café" programs to help patrons have a safe place to learn about the death and dying experience, along with tools & resources to share with their loved ones. 

About the Speaker:

Carrie Forbes is a liaison librarian at Laupus Library, the health resources library of East Carolina University, she also received her MLS from ECU. In addition to her professional work as a liaison librarian, she volunteers with a local hospice as a certified Death/End of Life Doula. 

Objectives:
    • To increase library staff awareness and understanding of the role of death/end-of-life doulas who can help patrons prepare for loss and the end of life of loved ones.
    • To demonstrate how library staff can offer a “death café" to help patrons learn about easy & free end-of-life documents, how to find death doulas, and how death cafes can help to lessen the fears surrounding death and grief.

This presentation addresses health information and data related to the NNLM initiative of confronting health misinformation associated with end of life care. 


Carrie's LibGuide on Death Doula & Death Cafe Resources

Thursday, May 4, 2023

NPR's Short Wave podcast: Will artificial intelligence help — or hurt — medicine?

 "A doctor's job is to help patients. With that help, often comes lots and lots of paperwork. That's where some startups are betting artificial intelligence may come in. The hope is that chatbots could generate data like treatment plans that would let doctors spend less time on paperwork and more time with their patients. But some academics warn biases and errors could hurt patients."

May is Mental Health Awareness Month

 



According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), "Mental Health Awareness Month was established in 1949 to increase awareness of mental health and wellness in Americans' lives and to celebrate recovery from mental illness."

While this awareness month has been around for a surprising (in my opinion) length of time, there is still a lot of work to be done in this area.  This hilarious video by Kristina Kuzmic sums it up well:

That said, while the pandemic has been devastating in so many ways, it's also brought mental health issues to the forefront.  People are struggling, but they're also opening up and speaking out about the mental health challenges they're facing.  More is being done at local, statenational, and even global levels.  All of this gives me hope that we might finally see some real change.