Access to Medical Knowledge: Libraries, Digitization, and the Public Good
Autor Frances K. Groenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 oct 2006
The book describes the transformative nature of information technology that has provided new opportunities to revolutionize clinical medical information delivery and patient information, and it explores the impact of the digital revolution in providing a new paradigm for scientific communication and a more open approach to accessing the literature through the Open Access movement. Groen demonstrates the medical librarian's successful adaptation to this changing information paradigm while simultaneously adhering to the perennial values of the profession.
Access to Medical Knowledge also addresses the need for intensified collaboration between branches of librarianship as a result of the digital library world bringing all library practitioners closer together. This book will interest all medical librarians because of its coverage of developments in international medical librarianship.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780810852723
ISBN-10: 0810852721
Pagini: 281
Dimensiuni: 152 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Scarecrow Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0810852721
Pagini: 281
Dimensiuni: 152 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Scarecrow Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Introduction: Libraries as a Public Good-Why?
Part 3 PART I: LIBRARIANS AND THEIR VALUES
Chapter 4 1. Librarians, Values, and the Public Good
Part 5 PART II: THE ORIGIN OF MEDICAL LIBRARIANSHIP
Chapter 6 2. Early Days in the Porfession
Chapter 7 3. The Emergence of the Medical LIbrary in the Twentieth Century, 1900-1960
Chapter 8 4. The War and After, 1940-1960
Chapter 9 5. Gaining Ground in Medical Libraries, 1960-1990
Part 10 PART III: MEDICAL LIBRARIES IN THE AGE OF THE INTERNET
Chapter 11 6. Digitization and the Internet: A Revolutionary Context for Libraries
Chapter 12 7. Consumer and Patient Information: Convergence on the Internet
Chapter 13 8. New Approaches to Clinical Medical Information
Part 14 PART IV: IS THERE A BETTER WAY?
Chapter 15 9. The Economics of Scientific and Medica Information
Chapter 16 10. Toward Open Access
Chapter 17 11. New Solutions in Access to Medical Information
Chapter 18 12. Controlling Copyright: The Necessary Balance
Part 19 Conclusion: Advancing the Role of the Medical Librarian in the Public Good
Part 20 Bibliography
Part 21 Index
Part 22 About the Author
Part 2 Introduction: Libraries as a Public Good-Why?
Part 3 PART I: LIBRARIANS AND THEIR VALUES
Chapter 4 1. Librarians, Values, and the Public Good
Part 5 PART II: THE ORIGIN OF MEDICAL LIBRARIANSHIP
Chapter 6 2. Early Days in the Porfession
Chapter 7 3. The Emergence of the Medical LIbrary in the Twentieth Century, 1900-1960
Chapter 8 4. The War and After, 1940-1960
Chapter 9 5. Gaining Ground in Medical Libraries, 1960-1990
Part 10 PART III: MEDICAL LIBRARIES IN THE AGE OF THE INTERNET
Chapter 11 6. Digitization and the Internet: A Revolutionary Context for Libraries
Chapter 12 7. Consumer and Patient Information: Convergence on the Internet
Chapter 13 8. New Approaches to Clinical Medical Information
Part 14 PART IV: IS THERE A BETTER WAY?
Chapter 15 9. The Economics of Scientific and Medica Information
Chapter 16 10. Toward Open Access
Chapter 17 11. New Solutions in Access to Medical Information
Chapter 18 12. Controlling Copyright: The Necessary Balance
Part 19 Conclusion: Advancing the Role of the Medical Librarian in the Public Good
Part 20 Bibliography
Part 21 Index
Part 22 About the Author
Recenzii
...the book should appeal not only to those interested in library history, but any librarian who regularly fields health-related questions.
This book is a refreshing and inspirational read....highly recommended....
...well researched....this book should find an audience among all librarians, not just medical librarians....and should interest library science students as well....enjoyable as well as informative.
In this book, Groen successfully presents the history and development of medical librarianship in genuinely interesting and informative detail, spanning from the early 1900s to the present day....a valuable resource, and researchers and librarians in the academic world can learn much from it.
Detailed in its research and driven by the author's passion for the profession of medical librarianship, this is a readable and illuminating history of medical librarianship, of interest to all those working in the health sector, as well as to a wider audience of information professionals.
Groen examines medical librarianship, tracing its history, and considering changes in the field caused by developments in information technology and telecommunications. She attempts to understand why librarians make certain choices and develop certain services. She draws on her own experiences as a medical librarian and in associations and defines three core values of medical librarians: providing access to the medical literature, empowering and educating library users, and preserving the wisdom of the past. Discussion revolves around access to clinical information and consumer health information in the internet age, challenges to providing access, alternative methods, and communication. The book is meant for medical librarians, professors, and other library and information professionals. Groen has been affiliated with Falk Library of the Health Professions, U. of Pittsburgh, and the medical library at McGill U. in Canada.
This book is a refreshing and inspirational read....highly recommended....
...well researched....this book should find an audience among all librarians, not just medical librarians....and should interest library science students as well....enjoyable as well as informative.
In this book, Groen successfully presents the history and development of medical librarianship in genuinely interesting and informative detail, spanning from the early 1900s to the present day....a valuable resource, and researchers and librarians in the academic world can learn much from it.
Detailed in its research and driven by the author's passion for the profession of medical librarianship, this is a readable and illuminating history of medical librarianship, of interest to all those working in the health sector, as well as to a wider audience of information professionals.
Groen examines medical librarianship, tracing its history, and considering changes in the field caused by developments in information technology and telecommunications. She attempts to understand why librarians make certain choices and develop certain services. She draws on her own experiences as a medical librarian and in associations and defines three core values of medical librarians: providing access to the medical literature, empowering and educating library users, and preserving the wisdom of the past. Discussion revolves around access to clinical information and consumer health information in the internet age, challenges to providing access, alternative methods, and communication. The book is meant for medical librarians, professors, and other library and information professionals. Groen has been affiliated with Falk Library of the Health Professions, U. of Pittsburgh, and the medical library at McGill U. in Canada.