Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Late summer book recommendations

Another summer is coming to an end and before you know it, school will be back in session.  Not for me though.  I'm done!  BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.  Sorry, I'm still giddy at the thought of not having homework and getting to read whatever I want!  Here are a few books I've really enjoyed recently:

A Thousand Ships by Natalie Haynes

This is the story of the Trojan War told from the perspective of the women who lived through it.  I particularly enjoyed Penelope's increasingly disgruntled letters to her husband Odysseus, calling him out on the nonsense that kept him from coming home: "You met a monster. You met a witch. Cannibals broke your ships. A whirlpool ate your friends."

The Book of Hope: A Survival Guide for Trying Times by Jane Goodall and Douglas Carlton Abrams

The title caught my attention, and the book did not disappoint.  I liked it so much I bought my own copy.  It's nice to have it as a reference when all the bad things in the world feel overwhelming, and I highly recommend it.  The audio book is especially great, as you get to hear Ms.Goodall tell her own stories.

How to Keep House While Drowning: A Gentle Approach to Cleaning and Organizing by KC Davis, LPC

Behind my kitchen sink sits a decorative plate that I inherited from my Grandma.  It says, "Thank God for dirty dishes, they have a tale to tell.  While others may go hungry, we're eating very well."  This short book contains similar advice (and a phenomenal table of contents).  If your house isn't spotless, it's not some sort of moral failing on your part.  Life happens, and sometimes it gets messy.

She Come by It Natural by Sarah Smarsh

This collection of essays tells the story of Dolly Parton and how her work influenced so many people throughout her career.  There is so much more to this remarkable woman than her perfect make-up and towering blond wigs.



Have you read any good books lately?  Let us know in the comments, or email your recommendations (annie dot lipski at aah dot org) for a future blog post!

Friday, August 19, 2022

How I spent my summer vacation: Adult Space Camp

This summer I took a trip to Alabama, not to the Gulf Shores, or to see Civil Rights history, but to the U.S. Space and Rocket Center, home of Space Camp. This has been on my bucket list for years. It was amazing to finally get there. 

My 3-day Adult Space Academy program included two simulated launch missions, rocket building, heat shield designing, a peek at items from the historical archives, and lots of cafeteria meals. 

My favorite parts were the simulated space missions. For the first, I was Flight Director back on earth helping run the show in Mission Control while half the team was flying to the International Space Station (ISS), exchanging crew, and returning to earth. I even took a picture of the first lines I had to read from one of the many binders we used: "Mission Control, this is Flight Director. Complete final pre-flight checks and prepare for lift-off of Discovery and her crew. The second mission? This time I was a scientist on a US moon base circa 2034. After using the automated scanner to check the health of the crew, we completed experiments, then prepared for a crew exchange. After leaving the moon, we flew back to earth and safely landed our vehicle. 

Other days had us building and shooting off our own rockets in the July Alabama heat and  testing a self-designed heat shield to keep a raw egg from cooking after being blasted by a 3,000 degree blowtorch for 3 minutes. Inside activities included a planetarium show and a presentation from an archivist who brought out prototypes of moon boots, a V-2 rocket timing mechanism, letters, and ISS food packets. 

I would recommend Space Camp/Adult Space Academy to anyone interested in space, or those looking for a weekend activity for themselves or their family. Besides programs for just kids or just adults, there are some where entire families can adventure together. 

Mission control
Mission Control

Launching our rockets outside

Moon boot prototype

Health scanner on moon base

Behind the scenes

Corky, our heat shield, before it burst into flames

Multi-axis trainer


Inside a trailer where Apollo astronauts were sequestered after their return from the moon

A Saturn V on its side

Thanks to my co-worker, Annie, for nudging me to write this blog post. 

Anyone else want to share how they spent their summer vacation?

Sphagnum moss: a surprising medical treatment from WWI (and 900 years before that, too)

My family recently read a children's chapter book about a British mouse who becomes a hero during WWII called Umbrella Mouse.  It's a fictionalized story of course, but a major theme is the less well-known stories of the many animals who served in war including dogs, horses, and pigeons

Another interesting part of the story introduced the use of spiderwebs and sphagnum moss as wound dressings and/or alternatives to cloth bandages. Turns out sphagnum moss has been used for over 1,000 years to treat and dress wounds. It also has properties that help preserve bog bodies and even sequester carbon. A 2017 article in Smithsonian magazine delves deeply into this little green plant some call an "unlikely savior". 

Cobweb - Flickr - spinster

SphagnumFallax


The magic of interlibrary loan

If you're a frequent public library user, you've probably borrowed books through interlibrary loan (ILL) at some point.  Have you ever wondered how the process works?  WUWM 89.7 FM's Mayaan Silver takes you behind the scenes of the Milwaukee County Federated Library System in this interesting article.

Special thanks to WHSLA member Liz Suelzer for sending this our way! 


Thursday, August 18, 2022

How to Take Advantage of Your Medical Librarian

res360

Google can bring you back 100,000 answers, a librarian can bring you back the right one. — Neil Gaiman, Author

When most people think of librarians, they picture the stereotypical older woman with glasses and a bun who shushes them for talking too loudly. In the past, librarians were the keepers of information but have now evolved to become navigators of information. Although information available online seems to be unlimited, finding what you are looking for hidden within the noise of search results is not always easy. Further, high-quality online medical information is not always free. How can a medical librarian support doctors in training and throughout their careers?  Continue reading ...


This article by Michelle Kraft recently appeared on The NEJM Resident 360 Blog, offering useful advice on how Medical Librarians can help health care professionals:

  • Improve Patient Care
  • Provide Tailored Search Results
  • Facilitate Research & Publishing
  • Off-Site Consultation

Ascension Wisconsin Librarian and WHSLA Member Kellee Selden recommends sharing this with your own library constituents via a blog or newsletter.  This is a great piece of marketing for ALL Medical Librarians! 

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

The High Cost of Paywalls - Hannah Morris - TEDxUAMonticello


I thought this was a very interesting TED Talk, not only because Libraries buy subscriptions in an attempt to mitigate some of those paywalls, but also because of the detrimental impact misinformation (which is FREE) has had on our society.    It's very well researched.  

Have a listen ...

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

The Librarians are "Silent but deadly!"


"Silent but deadly."  And entrusted with the power to save the known world.

How often do you see Librarians / Archivists given this much attention, power or credit?

Seems like there should be an Avengers movie about us ...  ;-)

Friday, August 12, 2022

Work Challenges and Inspiration among WHSLA Members: Featuring Kellee Selden

  


Michele: In March, I participated in a listening session with Erica Lake from the NNLM Region 6.
In preparation, I asked a few WHSLA Members for their candid answers to the following questions:

  1. What challenges do you face with work?
  2. What inspires you at work?
  3. What CE would you like to see the NNLM work up for us, esp. on the hospital side.

With their permission, I am sharing the responses here on the WHSLA Blog in a series with the hope that WHSLA Members will get to know each other better, share some great ideas and best practices, and realize that we may be facing a lot of the same challenges in a post- (Are we there yet?) pandemic world.



Kellee Selden, MLIS, is currently Library Manager at Ascension Health Care in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

1) What challenges do you face with work?

  • Finding the right person to get the job done.  For example, we need to locate an updated list of IPs for Ascension WI.  We have so many IT people and so much turnover that getting to the right person that has this information is a challenge.
  • Communication flow.  We have a lot of great information that needs to get to the associates.  Finding the right avenues and getting it to flow properly is difficult.  It may work for a while but if someone leaves, the chain can be broken and disrupt the whole flow.
  • Time for contract purchases and renewals.  Library contracts have to go through so many departments (Acquisitions, Contracting, IT, Admin, etc.) before it can be approved.  If it gets stuck in one department it can slow everything down and delay signature for weeks.

2) What inspires you at work?

    • Finding the right information that helps an associate treat a patient, do a presentation, or answer a question.
    • Merging contracts for the Ascension Librarians.  Getting better terms and conditions, making sure they are beneficial to us and saving money so we have the resources we need to treat patients, educate each other and provide the best service to everyone.
    • I love working with students, interns and residents.  When I teach them they generally get excited to learn how to find information that will help them with a project or their practice.  They have such interesting topics and I learn from them too.
    • The comradery with the other Ascension Librarians.  Before we merged into a national group, each librarian was on their own locally.  I was fortunate enough to work with Michele Matucheski before we went national.  Now we have over 20 librarians nationwide that collaborate.  We have regular meetings, share resources, help each other with projects etc.
    • Having a voice at the table. Our Vice President, Michelle Heavens, works closely with me and the other co-manager to keep us relevant and involved with leadership on our behalf.  We have been invited to be a part of national Ascension Nursing Pillars programs, deciding on enterprise-wide Point-of-Care tools etc.  She is embedding us in Ascension on local, regional and national levels.  We are more powerful as a group versus individual librarians across the country.

3) What CE would you like to see the NNLM work up for us, especially on the hospital side.  MLA seems to be doing more CE for the academic librarians these days, and NNLM is doing more outreach to public libraries now.  So what would be most helpful for those of us still working in hospital libraries?

  • This is not a CE, but a discussion I would appreciate.  How can hospital librarians and MLA work together to not just retain our jobs, but make executive leadership understand our value now and in the future.   As hospitals have lost money during the pandemic they will be making cuts.  MLA needs to help us make executive leadership understand that we don't just manage space but do value added research,
    save money on contract negotiations, right size budgets, do training so associates are using the resources efficiently, obtain ebooks, ejournals and other resources that are EBP for their departments, troubleshoot technology etc. If we collaborate and create a document that points all of this out perhaps we can release it to hospital leadership across the country.  This way they know our value and understand what we do for them, instead of them having misinformation and thinking we just take care of space and books.

Thank you, Kellee Selden, for sharing your work challenges and inspiration! 

If you would like to participate and share your answers to these 3 questions in a similar post for the WHSLA Blog, email Michele Matucheski with your answers and I'll make sure it gets posted.

Friday, August 5, 2022

Why Some Of Us Enjoy The Pain Of Spicy Foods (Short Wave podcast from NPR)

Short Wave, a daily science podcast from NPR, is one of my new favorite things to listen to. 

Check out this recent episode on why some people love spicy foods...even when they cause pain! 

What is monkeypox?

 What is monkeypox? A short video to bring in the loop.