Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course Module 4 )

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3 Part A)
Advertisements

HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3 Part A)
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3 Part B)
Other methods of finding journals Articles can also be found via PubMed, Subject listing, Language, and Publisher.
We have displayed the Browse publisher drop down menu. This You have full access to: list for an institution where all the material is included in the.
Promoting Open Digital Scholarship - A Canadian Library Perspective Leila Fernandez Rajiv Nariani Marcia Salmon York University Libraries, Canada.
Free and Open Access Resources. Objectives To gain an overview of the broad range of free resources available in various subject areas To identify resources.
HINARI website interface, journals, and other full text resources (module 2)
Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course: Module 4 )
Internet Resources – Databases and Search Tools (Module 6)
HINARI Advanced Course Part B Table of Contents: Section B Internet Resources (a sampling of gateways and portals) Booksee.org FreeBookCentre.net FreeBooks4Doctors.com.
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3 Part A)
Table of Contents: Part B  Internet Resources (a sampling of gateways and portals)  BookFinder  FreeBooks4Doctors.com  FreeBookCentre.net  Hesperian.
HINARI Advanced Course Part B Table of Contents: Section B Internet Resources (a sampling of gateways and portals) Google Books Booksee.org FreeBookCentre.net.
American Medical Association Journals include: JAMA (journal of the American Medical Association.), Archives of surgery, Archives of ophthalmology and.
Accessing journals by via PubMed Note the link to find articles through HINARI/PubMed. Using this option will be covered in later in the Short Course.
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3)
Databases and Library Catalogs Global Index Medicus/Global Health Library PubMed Source Bibliographic Database: International Health and Disability.
OARE Module 6C: E-journal, E-books and Internet Resources: Environmental Gateways/Portals.
Bio-Medical Information Retrieval from Net By Sukhdev Singh.
University of Antwerp Library TEW & HI UA library offers... books, journals, internet catalogue -UA catalogue, e-info catalogue databases -e.g.
NCBI/WHO PubMed/Hinari Course Introduction Session #1, Sept 13, 2005 Session #2, Sept 14, 2005 Internet Concepts and Scientific Literature Resources Ho.
We have displayed the Browse publisher drop down menu. This You have full access to: list for an institution where all the material is included in the.
Pharmacology & Prescribing Essential Drugs: Practical Guidelines International Drug Price Indicator Guide Merck Manuals WHO Model List of Essential Drugs.
Click on the tab to find journals by Subjects. From the drop down menu, we will select Parasitology and Parasitic Diseases.
Table of Contents – Part C Other (Internet) Resources: –HINARI/PubMed’s Clinical Queries (Clinical Study Categories & Systematic Reviews citations) and.
Accessing journals by via PubMed Note the link to find articles through HINARI/PubMed. Using this option will be covered in later in the Short Course.
Presented by Dr. S. C. Jindal Librarian Central Science Library University of Delhi Delhi Information Competency.
To Find contents by publisher, click on the drop down menu. This is different than the Partner publishers services where users enter the publisher’s portals.
Table of Contents: Part B  Internet Resources (a sampling of gateways and portals)  FreeBooks4Doctors.com  Hesperian Online Library  FreeBookCentre.net.
OARE Module 6D: E-journal, E-books and Internet Resources: Other Useful Resources.
Table of Contents – Part C Other (Internet) Resources: –HINARI/PubMed’s Clinical Queries (Clinical Study Categories & Systematic Reviews citations) and.
Section D Free E-journals Access Directory of Open Access Journals BioMed Central PubMed Central HighWire Press PubMed search options.
From the Advanced Search page of the Cochrane Library, we have clicked on the Cochrane Reviews: By Topic hyperlink. This has displayed the Topics for Cochrane.
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3)
Journals can be accessed by title from an alphabetical list. For this exercise, click on ‘L’ from the A-Z list. Note: there also is a View complete list.
Section D Free E-journals Access Directory of Open Access Journals BioMed Central PubMed Central HighWire Press PubMed search options.
Research4Life Programs: Similarities and Differences!
Full-text Article Access Problems Using the ‘Journals by title A-Z’ list, we are attempting to access a full-text article from the Blood. Although HINARI.
Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course: Module 4 )
To find journals by language of publication, click on the Languages bar in the horizontal frame. The Languages drop down menu appear and we will choose.
We now view some Internet-based sources of E-books besides those available from HINARI. Using the Internet Addresses (url) at the top of the slides, you.
Section D Free E-journals Access Directory of Open Access Journals BioMed Central PubMed Central HighWire Press PubMed search options.
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3)
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3 Part A)
From the initial page of the Cochrane Library, we have clicked on the Cochrane Reviews: By Topic hyperlink. This has displayed the Topics for Cochrane.
Research4Life Programs: Similarities and Differences!
Once logged-in, you will be taken into the Full text journals, databases, and other resources sub-page of the website. Note the ‘You are logged’ in message.
E-book Resources for HINARI Users (Advanced Course Module 7)
OARE Module 6A: E-journal, E-books and Internet Resources: Background; Free E-journals Access 10 August 2017.
Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course: Module 4 Part B) 01 July 2017.
Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course: Module 4 Part A) 01 July 2017.
Section D Free E-journals Access
Summon - HINARI Search (Basic Course Module 7)
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3 Part A)
Contents Module 6: E-journal, E-books and Internet Resources
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3)
Research4Life Programmes: Similarities and Differences!
HINARI/Health Information on the Internet (module 1.3)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4
E-book Resources for HINARI Users Part B (Advanced Course Module 7)
Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course: Module 4 Part A ) 02 May 2018.
Health Information Resources on the Internet Part A (Advanced Course: Module 4 ) 12 March 2018.
Accessing journals by Language 4
Research4Life Programmes: Similarities and Differences! (Part A)
Research4Life Programmes: Similarities and Differences!
Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course: Module 4 Part A) 14 December 2018.
Summon - HINARI Search (Basic Course: Module 7 Part A)
Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course: Module 4 Part A) 01 July 2017.
Presentation transcript:

Health Information Resources on the Internet (Advanced Course Module 4 )

Table of Contents – Section A Background Grey Literature – definition Types of health resources on the Internet Open Access journals Journal article retraction DSpace Egranary

Section B Agency Sources (a brief sampling) Inter-governmental agencies Governmental agencies Non-governmental agencies

Section C Types of Resources & Tools (a brief sampling) Databases and Library Catalogs Search Engines and Gateways Discussion groups

Section D Free E-journals Access Directory of Open Access Journals BioMed Central PubMed Central HighWire Press PubMed search options

Consumer Health/Patient Education HIV/AIDS Pharmacy and Pharmacology Public Health Reproductive Health Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases Section E - Health Information Sources by Subject (a brief sampling)

Section A Background Grey Literature – definition Types of health resources on the Internet Open Access journals Journal article retraction DSpace Egranary

Grey Literature Used by the librarians, medical and research professionals and students Is a body of materials that cannot be found easily through conventional channels – e.g. indexed databases or publishers’ lists Examples include technical reports from governmental, inter-governmental and non- governmental agencies or research groups, working papers from research groups or preprints Includes valuable information for the delivery of healthcare and policy development

Grey Literature (continued) Is difficult to identify and acquire for librarians and potential users Lacks strict bibliographic control - basic information such as author, publication date or publishing body and location may not readily available Is increasingly found on the Internet but can be difficult to identify, access and evaluate

Free Health Resources on the Internet Library catalogues (WHO and regional offices) Journals and books (see other module) Bulletins, newsletters Governmental, intergovernmental and non- governmental information resources Discussion groups Research databases Publishers’ databases Ready reference material e.g. encyclopedias

Open Access Journals ‘Open Access’ (OA) journals are scholarly journals that are available without financial or technical barriers other than Internet access Articles either are directly accessible from the publisher (e.g. PLOS – OA Gold) or archived in a repository (e.g. PubMed Central – OA Green) In most cases, the copyright is owned by the author, not the publisher (Creative Commons copyright licensing) Some OA journals are subsidized by academic or governmental institutions

OA Journal Options ‘Non-fee based OA journals’ – no fee required by authors; journals funded by governmental or inter-governmental agencies or NGOs ‘Fee-based OA journals’ require payment by the author - often paid by a grant or institution These OA journals accept articles from authors in low- income countries; the number varies from journal to journal; peer-reviewers (theoretically) do not know if authors have requested fee waivers ‘Delayed open access journals’ where the articles are available between 6 – 24 months ‘Hybrid open access journals’ contain some current articles that are free access (e.g. The Lancet)

Sponsored by several governments, GOAP is a current snapshot of the status of Open Access (OA) to scientific information around the world. It is organized by region, funding mandates, key organizations, thematic areas plus OA news articles and key publications.

This is a cautionary note. Retraction Watch is a website that tracks the retraction of peer-reviewed papers due to fabrication, faulty research and/or statistics. All types of journal publishers (open access and commercial) must deal with these issues.

Developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, DSPACE ( is a software to build open access repositories - for academic and non-profit organizations. The software is free/downloadable from this site, can be installed ‘out of the box’ and customized locally.

From this DSPACE page, you can download the software and documentation plus learn about new features and improvements.

Displayed is the initial page of Makerere University Institutional Repository (MAKIR). Note the Communities within this repository.

This is the initial page of the College of Health Sciences Community. Note the various Sub-community – units in the College of Health Sciences. Material also is accessible by Date, Authors, Titles, Subjects and a keyword search tool.

We have displayed the egranary home page. This is a tool for building a digital library that captures information from the Internet and stores it locally. The project is a useful option for low-bandwidth institutions and has been installed in 700+ organizations.

Section B - Agency Sources (a brief sampling) Inter-governmental Agencies – WHO, UNAIDS Governmental Agencies - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S), National Library of Medicine (U.S.) Non-governmental Agencies – Family Health International, INASP

The WHO site contains current news information plus links to statistics, publications, programs, health topics and guidelines.

The UNAIDS webpage is the site of an inter-organization consortium. It includes significant epidemiological, statistical, logistical and clinical information on HIV/AIDS.

Family Health International is a women and reproductive health NGO with extensive projects in many developing countries.

INASP is an NGO that focuses on communication, knowledge and networking projects in low-income countries.

Databases and Library Catalogs – PubMed, Global Health Library Search Engines and Gateways – Health Sciences Online, Essential Health Links Gateway Discussion groups – Dgroups, GHD Online, HIFA 2015 Section C Types of Resources & Tools (a brief sampling)

This is the searchable platform for the Global Index Medicus/WHO. It is a compilation of all the WHO and Regional Libraries catalogs. Seaching is via keyword and contains links to many full-text documents.

The PubMed database contains over 23,000,000 indexed articles. The search results contain links to free articles. In the past 15 years, the scope has been broadened to include more journals covering global health.

This is the initial page of Google HINARI search. The most relevant links are listed first.

Google Scholar provides access to scholarly literature including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts and articles, from academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, universities and other scholarly organizations.

Health Mash Search Engine combines Web 2.0 universal search and discovery technology with Semantic Web Concepts in a search interface. It contains links to journal articles, books, blogs and other Internet resources.

Health Sciences Online is a searchable portal with over 50,000 reviewed articles on courses, references, guidelines and other learning resources. It was launched in late 2008 and includes the Google Translation option.

Results of a type 2 diabetes AND developing countries search. Note the Refine Resource Type and other options.

Essential Health Links The Essential Health Links gateway contains over 750 links to relevant WWW sites for the health community in developing and transitional countries. Annotated links are organized in Health General Health Resources, Library and Publishing Support and Specific Health Resources categories.

This displays the Essential Health Links Table of Contents for Library and Publishing Support and Specific Health Resources.

Dgroups is an organization with multiple development-related discussion groups. After registering, you can join any groups that are of interest to you.

GHD Online is an online platform of communities where health professionals share proven practices, connect with colleagues and find resources for improving outcomes in resource limited settings. Note link to the communities on the initial page.

HIFA2015 is an international discussion group and resource geared toward the health information needs of low-income countries. Registration is required but free.