Providing library and reference services within a biomedical research community presents special challenges for librarians, especially those in historically lower-funded states. These challenges can include understanding needs, defining and communicating the library's role, building relationships, and developing and maintaining general and subject specific knowledge. This article describes a biomedical research network and the work of health sciences librarians at the lead intensive research institution with librarians from primarily undergraduate institutions and tribal colleges. Applying the concept of a community of practice to a collaborative effort suggests how librarians can work together to provide effective reference services to researchers in biomedicine.
One More Try on the FTP 2 This is a slight revision of RFC 686, mainly differing in the discussion of print files. Reading several RFCs that I (sigh) never heard of before writing 686 has convinced me that although I was right all along it was for the wrong reasons. The list of reply codes is also slightly different to reflect the four lists in RFCs 354, 454, 542, and 640 more completely. Let me also suggest that if there are no objections before June 1, everyone take it as official that HELP should return 200, that SRVR should be used as discussed below, and that "permanent" 4xx errors be changed to 5xx. And thanks to Jon Postel who just spent all evening helping me straighten this all out. 2a Aside from a cry of anguish by the site responsible for the security hassle described below, I've only had one comment on this, which was unfavorable but, alas, unspecific. Let me just say, in the hopes of avoiding more such, that I am not just trying to step on toes for the fun of it, and that I don't think the positive changes to FTP-1 proposed here are necessarily the best possible thing. What they are, I think, is easily doable. The great-FTP-in-the-sky isn't showing any signs of universal acceptability, and it shouldn't stand in the way of solving immediate problems. 2b Leaving Well Enough Alone 3
Date Presented 04/22/2023
There are few publications on mental health simulations in OT programs. This scoping review found that students gained increased knowledge, competence, and confidence in mental health practice skills and enjoyed simulation.
Primary Author and Speaker: Kelly Machnik
Additional Authors and Speakers: Ashley McKnight
Contributing Authors: Meghan Fox, Betsy Williams, Barbara Harvey, Emily Piven
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.