Thursday, December 30, 2004

E-journals temporarily down

The following e-journals are temporarily inaccessible at the Highwire e-journal platform :
The publisher is being contacted. We hope to have them available again shortly.

Annals of Surgical Oncology
http://www.annalssurgicaloncology.org/

Neurology
http://www.neurology.org/

NEJM Online : New England Journal of Medicine Online

PowerPoint slide downloads from NEJM Online in 2005.

Please note that this recent email has gone out to subscribers of NEJM online. This is for personal subscribers only. Institutional subscribers are not allowed to download to PowerPoint.

""Download NEJM figures and illustrations for use in presentations and teaching materials.
Figures and illustrations from NEJM are now available at NEJM Online as PowerPoint slides. Each slide appears complete with the title, citation information, and the Journal logo. Simply left click on any figure, illustration or table and the PowerPoint button will appear.""

Tuesday, December 28, 2004

Academic and Scholar Search Engines and Sources

Academic and Scholar Search Engines and Sources
http://VirtualPrivateLibrary.BlogSpot.com/Scholar.pdf

Internet MiniGuide Annotated Link Compilation white paper titled "Academic and Scholar Search Engines and Sources" is a 32 page research paper listing selected resources both new and existing that will help anyone who is attempting to find academic and scholarly information and knowledge available on the Internet. Each source is described along with the URL address than can be accessed. It is freely available as a .pdf file (966KB) at the above link from the Virtual Private Library™ and authored by Marcus P. Zillman, M.S., A.M.H.A. It was released 12-03-04. Other white papers are available by clicking here.

Wednesday, December 22, 2004

New feature in JBC Online at Highwire Press : direct download of figures to Power Point!

JBC -- TOC Awareness Alert

A new issue of Journal of Biological Chemistry has been made available:
31 December 2004; Vol. 279, No. 53
Table of Contents URL:
http://www.jbc.org/content/vol279/issue53/index.shtml?etoc


JBC Online now offering direct download of figures to Power Point!

In order to better serve our readers, we, with our partners at HighWire
Press, have added a feature to JBC Online that allows a reader to download
of a figure directly to Power Point. Many readers use figures from JBC
papers for teaching and this feature facilitates that process. The figure
is automatically loaded into Power Point along with the citation
information. Click on the desired figure in any article, and then click
"PowerPoint Slide for Teaching." The rest is automatic.

_______________________________________________________________________
Copyright (c) 2004 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology.


Clinical Alert : Use of Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Suspended

Use of Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Suspended in Large
Alzheimer's Disease Prevention Trial

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced today that research investigators suspended, until urther notice, the use of two drugs, naproxen (220 mg twice a day) and celecoxib (200 mg twice a day), in a large, three-arm, national Alzheimer's disease prevention trial sponsored by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), a part of the NIH. The trial, called the Alzheimer's Disease Anti-Inflammatory Prevention Trial (or ADAPT) was designed to assess the potential benefit of long-term use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) - naproxen (Aleve(tm)) and the COX-2 inhibitor celecoxib (Celebrex(tm) ) in decreasing the risk of developing Alzheimer's Disease in people 70 years of age or older who were considered to be at increased risk because of family history, but did not have symptoms of the disease.

Approximately 2400 volunteer participants were randomly assigned to receive naproxen, celecoxib, or placebo for periods of time up to three years. Although no significant increase in risk for celecoxib was found in this trial, the use of these drugs in the study was suspended in part because of findings reported last week from a National Cancer Institute (NCI) trial to test the effectiveness of celecoxib in preventing colon cancer. In addition, however, data from the ADAPT trial indicated an apparent increase in cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events among the participants taking naproxen when compared with those on placebo.

"This step is being taken as a precautionary measure to ensure the safety of the study's participants," said NIH Director, Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D. "The investigators made their decision based on the risk/benefit analysis specific to this trial," added Dr. Zerhouni.

The ADAPT trial began in 2001 and was conducted at six sites across the U.S. - Tampa, FL; Rochester, NY; Baltimore, MD; Sun City, AZ; Seattle, WA; and, Boston, MA. The principal investigator for the study is John Breitner, M.D., of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center Puget Sound and the University of Washington.

Investigators and NIH scientists will continue to review this and other NSAIDs studies sponsored by NIH in the light of these findings. It should be pointed that the cancer prevention trials and the ADAPT study are among the first long-term, clinical trials to test these classes of
drugs. These studies are examining these compounds for uses very different from the uses for which these medications are currently approved. NIH and FDA will work together to provide the public with information they need to make informed health decisions.

Information for the public and health professionals will be posted at www.nih.gov as soon as additional data become available.

The NIH comprises the Office of the Director and 27 Institutes and Centers. The Office of the Director is the central office at NIH, and is responsible for setting policy for NIH and for planning, managing, and coordinating the programs and activities of all the NIH components. The NIH, the Nation's medical research agency, is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The NIA is one of 27 Institutes and Centers at the NIH. It leads the Federal Government effort conducting and supporting research on the biomedical and social and behavioral aspects of aging and the problems of older people. For more information on aging-related research and the
NIA, please visit the NIA website at www.nia.nih.gov. The public may also call for publications describing these efforts and offering health information for older people and their families at 1-800-222-2225, the toll free number for the National Institute on Aging Information Center.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, December 20, 2004

CONTACTS:
John Burklow,
Don Ralbovsky,
NIH Office of Communications
and Public Liaison
301-496-5787

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

Internet Archive to build alternative to Google

Internet Archive to build alternative to Google
By Mark Chillingworth [21-12-2004]

Ten major international libraries have agreed to combine their digitised book collections into a free text-based archive hosted online by the not-for-profit Internet Archive. All content digitised and held in the text archive will be freely available to online users.

Two major US libraries have agreed to join the scheme: Carnegie Mellon University library and The Library of Congress have committed their Million Book Project and American Memory Projects, respectively, to the text archive. The projects both provide access to digitised collections.

The Canadian universities of Toronto, Ottawa and McMaster have agreed to add their collections, as have China's Zhejiang University, the Indian Institute of Science, the European Archives and Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Egypt.

In a statement, the Internet Archive describes the Text Archive as an Open Access archive that will "ensure permanent and public access to our published heritage". Over a million books have been committed to the Text Archive by the member institutes, with 50,000 available in the first quarter of 2005.

The San Francisco-based Internet Archive was founded in 1996 to build a library for the internet that offered access to historical collections. It's most well-known online project is the Wayback Machine, which harvests snapshots of freely-available websites.

Announced 24 hours after Google's tie-up with the university libraries of Oxford, Stanford, Michigan and Harvard, and the New York Public Library, the Internet Archive project is likely to be seen as the first of many alternatives to the Google Print library.

Internet Archive said: "Commercial companies are currently working with libraries to digitise materials as well. We are encouraging these efforts and hope most of these materials will also be available through Text Archives."

Monday, December 20, 2004

Net Snippets : the first free post-search tool for web searches

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:

Christine Shock
Shock PR, Inc.
508-893-9933
cshock@shockpr.com
Shelly Katz
Net Snippets
shelly@netsnippets.com
(408) 884-2305

NET SNIPPETS MAKES THE HOLIDAYS HAPPY FOR INTERNET USERS; PUTS WEB INFORMATION MANAGEMENT AT EVERYONE’S FINGERTIPS FOR FREE

FIRST FREE POST-SEARCH TOOL THAT FINALLY ALLOWS ALL INTERNET USERS TO SAVE AND ORGANIZE THEIR WEB RESEARCH INTO ONE LOCATION

Sunnyvale, CA, December 13, 2004 -- Net Snippets, the leader in Internet post-search solutions, today announced the first free post-search information management tool for everyday Internet users that saves and organizes web results in one easily-accessible location. Like Net Snippets’ other award-winning products, the new Free Edition provides web surfers with a simple and effective way to save and manage text, images, links and entire web pages. While some search engines let users save results from their site, Net Snippets allows users to save results from any search engine and any website in one convenient location. And, the Free Edition really is completely free – without time limitations or other restrictions.

The Net Snippets Free Edition features easy drag-and-drop operation that places snipped content from any source easily at hand. It is completely safe. No user information is ever captured, there is no usage tracking, and there are no hidden files or spyware.

It’s fast, it’s simple, and all the functionality of the Net Snippets Free Edition is contained in a single, light, one-minute 1.6mb download, available immediately from Net Snippets’ website at http://www.netsnippets.com. It works with Windows 98/2000/ME/XP and can be used with Internet Explorer, Mozilla, Mozilla Firefox, and Netscape browsers.

Yael Elish, Net Snippets’ CEO, said, “Net Snippets is bringing the concept of free Internet search to post-search. Now, everyone who uses the Internet to search for information like sports statistics, recipes, health information, or anything else that interests them, can use Net Snippets’ Free Edition to collect it, organize it, add their own comments and notes, and easily share it with others, if they want. Users are in great need of tools for managing their online research and we’re proud to be the first to offer a completely free post-search solution that can be used by all Internet users, on any search engine or website and in conjunction with Google or any other desktop search product.”

Tens of thousands of individual professional and corporate users have been using Net Snippets’ stable, well-established applications for years. In fact, in mid-November, the Association of Independent Information Professionals (AIIP) honored Net Snippets with its top technology award for 2004. And EContent Magazine this month recognized Net Snippets as one of the “EContent 100” companies of 2004. Now, with the Free Edition, regular Internet users will understand why Net Snippets has captured all this attention.

The new Free Edition extends the range of Net Snippets’ products, so now the needs of every category of Internet user are addressed – from casual surfers using the Free Edition to business, academic and professional researchers using the Standard and Professional Editions. All Net Snippets’ products are based on an open-standard, flexible architecture, rather then a proprietary format. They are optimized for performance, won’t slow the computer or browser, and by far the most stable and flexible technology available in the post-search space. All Net Snippets’ products are available from the Net Snippets website.

About Net Snippets

Net Snippets, established in 2001, pioneered the Post-Search space and is now the leading provider of personal and collaborative Post-Search tools and solutions designed to simplify, streamline and maximize the online and search experience. Net Snippets offers personal, standalone desktop and collaborative solutions that are based on open standards and are high performing. Products include: Free Edition, designed for every Internet user, Standard Edition, designed for intensive research; Professional Edition, for business users and information specialists; and Enterprise Edition, a server product installed within organizations. Net Snippets has tens of thousands of licensed customers, including major academic institutions and enterprise organizations around the world, as well as individual users. Net Snippets has U.S. offices in Sunnyvale, CA, and in Tel Aviv, Israel. To learn more about Net Snippets, visit its website at http://www.netsnippets.com.

# # #
All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective owners.

Friday, December 17, 2004

New open access journal from BioMedCentral added

Harm Reduction Journal

http://www.harmreductionjournal.com/home/

Publisher: BioMed Central

Harm Reduction Journal (HRJ) is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal whose focus is prevalent patterns of psychoactive drug use, the public policies meant to control them, and the search for effective methods of reducing the adverse medical, public health, and social consequences associated with both drugs and drug policies.

We are especially interested in studies of the evolving patterns of drug use around the world, their implications for the spread of HIV/AIDS and other blood-borne pathogens, and in accurate descriptions and rigorous evaluations of innovative policies and practices for harm reduction in diverse societies. HRJ also seeks to improve the access to authoritative and current harm reduction literature for health professionals and policy specialists in the non-English speaking world, by offering access to translations of published articles, and their data sets.

While there are many fine print journals already published on drug issue, the Open Access HRJ is the first to focus exclusively on this public health model and to make contemporary research on harm reduction freely available online - as well as providing full access to the large body of factual reports and policy documents published by governments and by the growing international network of harm reduction organizations.

Harm Reduction Journal (HRJ) considers the following types of articles:
* Research: reports of data from original research and scholarship.
* Book reviews: 1000-1500 words on recent and classic works in the field.
* Brief reports: brief reports of data from original research, usually about 1500 words.
* Case reports: reports of clinical cases that can be educational, describe a diagnostic or therapeutic dilemma, suggest an association, or present an important adverse reaction.
* Commentaries: short, focused and opinionated articles on any subject within the journal's scope. These articles are usually related to a contemporary issue, such as recent research findings or other HRJ publications. They focus on specific issues and are about 1500 words.
* Methodology articles: present a new experimental method, test or procedure. The method described may either be completely new, or may offer a better version of an existing method. The article must describe a demonstrable advance on what is currently available.
* Reviews: comprehensive, authoritative, descriptions of important subjects within the journal's scope. HRJ will regularly solicit these and is open to proposals for additional topics. These have an educational aim and are 2000-5000 words - with more extensive and wider ranging references.

All articles will be published immediately upon acceptance (after peer review) and soon after listed in PubMed.

ISSN: 1477-7517

Professor Ernest Drucker, PhD
Editor-in-Chief
Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine
New York
United States

Email: info@biomedcentral.com

Abstracts available online. Articles available in HTML and PDF format.

Note: Harm Reduction Journal is committed to open access. To cover the cost of
publication it will be introducing article-processing charges from 01 Dec
2004 onwards.

eCOMMUNITY: International Journal of Mental Health & Addiction

eCOMMUNITY: International Journal of Mental Health & Addiction

http://www.ecommunity-journal.com/journal.php


ISSN 1705-4583
From v.1:no.1 (2003:Sept)-

The eCOMMUNITY offers an Internet-based forum for up-to-date information and developments in mental health and addiction-related research, policy, phenomenology, literature, and treatment. Through publishing high quality peer-reviewed articles, it is our aim to establish and lead an international debate on mental health and addiction, and to help make sense of how issues of mental health and addiction affect individuals and communities.

Papers may be submitted under one of the following categories:

* Letters to the editor
* Regular articles
* Letters of law
* Brief reports
* Clinical case studies
* Commentaries
* Book reviews
* News updates (research, education and clinical)

The eCOMMUNITY journal is published twice a year. The Journal is an Open Access journal, available to everyone and is distributed free of charge. We welcome submission of articles for publication in the eCOMMUNITY by researchers, clinicians, educators, frontline workers, other allied health professionals and community stakeholders.

Only electronic submissions will be accepted. Please use the Microsoft
Word format (.doc) and email your paper to the editor-in-chief
(editor-in-chief@ecommunity-journal.com).





Thursday, December 16, 2004

New open access journal

A new journal title has been added to LYMAN, the UConn Health Center Library's online catalog :

International Journal of Medical Sciences

http://www.medsci.org/index.htm

from : v.1 (2004:March)-

Publisher: Ivyspring International Publisher
ISSN 1449-1907

International Journal of Medical Sciences is a peer-reviewed scientific journal publishing papers of excellence in all areas of medical sciences. International Journal of Medical Sciences is available free of charge as an Open Access journal on the internet.

The Journal serves wide ranges of international audiences of medical researchers, pharmaceutical employees, specialized and general clinicians. Submissions of papers in areas of basic medical sciences are welcomed as well as papers in clinical and experimental research related to the studies of human diseases.


Managing Editor:

Dr. Anita Bay
Managing editor of MedSci/Ivysping Editorial
New South Wales, Australia
Editorial corresponding: editorial@medsci.org

Wednesday, December 15, 2004

Google To Scan Books From Big Libraries

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ Google Inc. is trying to establish an online reading
room for five major libraries by scanning stacks of hard-to-find books
into its widely used Internet search engine.

The ambitious initiative announced late Monday gives Mountain View,
Calif.-based Google the right to index material from the New York public
library as well as libraries at four universities _ Harvard, Stanford,
Michigan and Oxford in England.

The Michigan and Stanford libraries are the only two so far to agree to
submit all their material to Google's scanners.

The New York library is allowing Google to include a small portion of its
books no longer covered by copyright while Harvard is confining its
participation to 40,000 volumes so it can gauge how well the process
works. Oxford wants Google to scan all its books originally published
before 1901.

Scanning books so they can be read through computers isn't new. Both
Google and Amazon.com already have programs that offer online glimpses of
new books while an assortment of other sites for several years have
provide digital access to some material in libraries scattered around the
country.

But Google's latest commitment could have the biggest impact yet, given
the breadth of material that the company hopes to put into its search
engine, which has become renowned for its processing speed, ease of use
and accuracy.

``It's a significant opportunity to bring our material to the rest of the
world,'' said Paul LeClerc, president of the New York Public Library. ``It
could solve an old problem: If people can't get to us, how can we get to
them?''

Librarians are also excited about the prospect of creating a digital
record for the reams of valuable material written long before computers
were conceived.

``This is the day the world changes,'' said John Wilkin, a University of
Michigan librarian working with Google. ``It will be disruptive because
some people will worry that this is the beginning of the end of libraries.
But this is something we have to do to revitalize the profession and make
it more meaningful.''

The project gives Google's search engine another potential drawing card as
it faces stiffening competition for Yahoo Inc. and Microsoft Corp.'s MSN.
Attracting visitor traffic is crucial to Google's financial health because
the company depends on revenue generated by people clicking on advertising
links posted next to the main body of search results.

Scanning the library books figures to be a daunting task, even for a
cutting edge company such as Google, whose online index of 8 billion Web
pages already has revolutionized the way people look for information.

Michigan's library alone contains 7 million of its library volumes _ about
132 miles of books. Google hopes to get the job done at Michigan within
six years, Wilkin said.

Harvard's library is even larger with 15 million volumes. Virtually all of
that material will be off limits Google shows it can scan the material
without losing or damaging anything, said Harvard professor Sidney Verba,
who also is director of the university's library.

``The librarians at Harvard are very punctilious about protecting their
great treasures,'' Verba said.

The project also poses other prickly issues, such as how to convert
material written in foreign languages, and the issue of protecting
copyrighted books.

As it does with new books already included in its search engine, Google
will only allow its users to view the bibliographies or other snippets of
copyrighted books scanned from the libraries. The search engine will
provide unrestricted access to all material in the public domain _ work no
longer covered by copyrights.

The books scanned from libraries will be included in the same Google index
the spans the Web. By throwing everything into the same pot, Google risks
burying the library book results far below the Web documents containing
the same search terms term, reducing the usefulness of the feature, said
Danny Sullivan, editor of Search Engine Watch, an industry newsletter.

KluwerOnline Journals Migrate to SpringerLink - January 2005

KluwerOnline Journals Migrate to SpringerLink -- January 2005
Due to the recent merger of Springer-Verlag with Kluwer Academic Publishers all journals hosted by KluwerOnline will be available only at SpringerLink beginning sometime in January 2005. Between now and January 3, there will be no disruption of service to KluwerOnline. Once the migration is completed and tested, visitors to KluwerOnline will automatically be redirected to SpringerLink. There will be no immediate changes to URLs. Libraries' bibliographic systems with KluwerOnline URL will automatically be rerouted to the corresponding page on SpringerLink. This includes journal home pages, article pages, and full-text PDFs.
Although the migration is not yet complete, PubMed Linkout buttons have all been changed from Kluwer buttons to SpringerLink buttons. These PubMedLinkout buttons currently direct to the KluwerOnline e-journal platform and not the SpringerLink e-journal platform..... Library URL's in the LYMAN online catalog and the e-journal list will be changed when SpringerLink communicates the new urls and when the migration is complete.

Tuesday, December 14, 2004

EXTENDED OCLC SYSTEM MAINTENANCE ON SUNDAY, December 19, 2004

-----Original Message-----
From: OCLC's FirstSearch Announcements and Information
[mailto:FIRSTSEARCH-L@OCLC.ORG]On Behalf Of OCLC Reference
Sent: Tuesday, December 14, 2004 9:31 AM
To: FIRSTSEARCH-L@OCLC.ORG
Subject: EXTENDED OCLC SYSTEM MAINTENANCE ON SUNDAY, December 19, 2004


EXTENDED OCLC SYSTEM MAINTENANCE ON SUNDAY, December 19, 2004 : WorldCat and FirstSearch and ECO all will be affected.

To allow for hardware and system maintenance, the OCLC FirstSearch service will be unavailable for approximately 5 hours, instead of the customary 4 hours, beginning at 02:00 a.m. US Eastern Standard Time Sunday, December 19, 2004. This will also affect any libraries that use OCLC Group Catalog services, any libraries using WorldCat Resource Sharing or any libraries that link into WorldCat and FirstSearch and ECO from partner information services. Barring any unexpected problems, we anticipate that these services will be available for use again beginning at approximately 07:00 a.m. US Eastern Daylight Time Sunday, December 19, 2004.

OCLC sincerely regrets the inconvenience to its users. Thank you for your patience and understanding.

Please contact your regional service provider () or OCLC's Customer Support Department (1-800-848-5800 or support@oclc.org with questions.

Monday, December 13, 2004

New e-journal title from BioMedCentral added

A new title from BioMedCentral Open Access Publishers has been added today :
Journal of Autoimmune Diseases
from v.1:no.1 (2004:Oct)- .
Journal of Autoimmune Diseases is ready to receive papers on clinical and experimental research in autoimmunity.

Bulletin of the World Health Organization

The entire backfile of the Journal : Bulletin of the World Health Organization has been made open access and free to all from v.1 (1947)- .
The backfile issues at the WHO site are in PDF files.
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/en/

The SciELO e-journal site has loaded the Bulletin from v.78:no. 12 (2000)- creating HTML formatted articles and search tools for keyword and author searching, and to provides cross-linking of references into PubMed.
http://www.scielosp.org/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0042-9686&lng=en&nrm=iso

Friday, December 10, 2004

PubMed On Tap - new version 1.6 dated December 6, 2004

http://archive.nlm.nih.gov/proj/pmot/news.php
For those of you interested in handheld compters,
Version 1.6 of PubMed on Tap for Palm OS PDAs and smartphones is
available at http://archive.nlm.nih.gov/proj/pmot/downloadPalm.php.

These features are new in Version 1.6:
1) At startup, the Search and Profile settings are set from your last search.
2) You have the option to cluster results by clinical relevance recommended in Evidence Based Medicine.
3) The Search defaults to return 50 results. 20 and 40 results are other options.
4) If there is a linkout to free-full-text, the linkout icon is green.
5) Error messages are more meaningful.

Susan Hauser has created a PowerPoint presentation about PMoT that includes the newer features. It has screen shots from both Palm and PocketPC devices. Feel free to use it as is or cut and paste as needed.
It is available from http://archive.nlm.nih.gov/proj/pmot/docs.php

Thursday, December 09, 2004

Ebsco databases working again.

-----Original Message-----
From: Public Networked Resources at the UConn Library
[mailto:PUBNET-L@listserv.uconn.edu]On Behalf Of Dave Bretthauer
Sent: Wednesday, December 08, 2004 4:51 PM
To: PUBNET-L@LISTSERV.UCONN.EDU
Subject: [PUBNET-L] Ebsco databases working again


The urls again point to working access. When Ebsco notifies
me of new urls, I will update them.

Dave

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Dave Bretthauer
Network Services Librarian
University of Connecticut Libraries
369 Fairfield Way U-2005-05SY
Storrs, CT 06269-2005
Voice: (860) 486-6494
Fax: (860) 486-2184
http://www.lib.uconn.edu/~dbretthauer

ACS e-journals down December 11-12

ACS Publications will put into service a new Storage Area Network (SAN) from Saturday 11 December to Sunday 12 December 2004, to more effectively support ACS Publications Division Web products and services. The implementation of this enhanced network will result in the following periods when access to various products and services will either be limited or unavailable. Anticipated downtime by product is listed below:

ACS Journal Content and Chemical & Engineering News Online

Sat. 11 December, 7:30 pm - 11:00 pm EST (Washington, DC)

Titles affected
Accounts of chemical research
Analytical chemistry (Washington)
Biochemistry (Easton)
Bioconjugate chemistry
Biotechnology progress
Chemical & engineering news
Chemical research in toxicology
Chemical reviews
Chemistry of materials
Chemtech
Energy & fuels
Environmental science & technology
I & EC product research and development
Industrial & engineering chemistry fundamentals
Industrial & engineering chemistry process design and development
Industrial & engineering chemistry product research and development
Industrial & engineering chemistry research
Industrial & engineering chemistry. Analytical edition
Industrial & engineering chemistry. Chemical and engineering data series
Industrial and engineering chemistry
Inorganic chemistry
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
Journal of chemical and engineering data
Journal of chemical documentation
Journal of chemical information and computer sciences
Journal of combinatorial chemistry
Journal of industrial and engineering chemistry
Journal of medicinal chemistry
Journal of natural products
Journal of organic chemistry
Journal of physical chemistry (1952)
Journal of physical chemistry. A, Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory
Journal of physical chemistry. B, Condensed matter, materials, surfaces, interfaces & biophysical
Journal of physical chemistry. B, Materials, surfaces, interfaces, & biophysical
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Langmuir
Macromolecules
Organic letters
Organic process research & development
Organometallics
Product R & D

Tuesday, December 07, 2004

EBSCOHost databases temporarily unavailable

-----Original Message-----
From: Public Networked Resources at the UConn Library



Folks,

EbscoHost databases (CINAHL and PsycInfo) are prompting us
for a library barcode. I'm not sure what happened to our IP
authentication but I'm checking.

Dave

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Dave Bretthauer
Network Services Librarian
University of Connecticut Libraries
369 Fairfield Way U-2005-05SY
Storrs, CT 06269-2005
Voice: (860) 486-6494
Fax: (860) 486-2184
http://www.lib.uconn.edu/~dbretthauer

Monday, December 06, 2004

New e-journal title added today from BioMedCentral : Australia and New Zealand Health Policy

A new title from BioMedCentral Open Access Publisher has been added to the online catalog today.
Australia and New Zealand Health Policy
v.1:no.1 (2004:November)-

Australia and New Zealand Health Policy is a new journal which aims to promote debate and understanding about contemporary health policy developments in Australia and New Zealand. Although there are other international journals focussing on health policy, there are no Australian or New Zealand journals with this focus.

One of the aims of Australia and New Zealand Health Policy is to focus on contemporary critiques and contemporary developments. Accordingly an e-journal format is particularly appropriate. Australian and New Zealand Health Policy is an open access journal which means that all articles will be freely and universally accessible online which, amongst other things, means that all articles will be freely and universally accessible online without any barriers to access, which increases their visibility.


New free e-book title added to catalog today

Dietary Supplements: A Framework for Evaluating Safety
Washington, D.C. : National Academies Press, 2004

A new book sponsored by the Committe on the Framework for Evaluating the Safety of the Dietary Supplements, National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine
has been made available free online at the NAP- National Academies Press.

The growing consumer interest in health and fitness has expanded the market for a wide range of products, from yoga mats to the multiple dietary supplements now on the market. Supplements are popular, but are they safe? Many dietary supplements are probably safe when used as recommended. However, since 1994 when Congress decided that they should be regulated as if they were foods, they are assumed to be safe unless the Food and Drug Administration can demonstrate that they pose a significant risk to the consumer. But there are many types of products that qualify as dietary supplements, and the distinctions can become muddled and vague. Manufacturers are not legally required to provide specific information about safety before marketing their products. And the sales of supplements have been steadily increasing—all together, the various types now bring in almost $16 billion per year. Given these confounding factors, what kind of information can the Food and Drug Administration use to effectively regulate dietary supplements? This book provides a framework for evaluating dietary supplement safety and protecting the health of consumers.

PDFs now available on MD Consult!

Monday, December 6, 2004

PDFs now available on MD Consult!

PDFs will now be available for new Elsevier Journals and Clinics and for more than 30,000 articles dating back to 2002. Portable Document Format (PDF) preserves the fonts, images, graphics, and layout of the article.

An article has PDF availability if you see the words "PDF" with an Adobe® icon listed under the article title. Also in the contents section of the article that is open, there will be a link called "Article PDF". Clicking either of these will open the article in PDF format if you have Adobe Reader® software. You will then be able to view, download and print the article in PDF.

To download Adobe Reader® software, go to "My Profile" and click on the link "My Preferences Main Page" located on the left margin. You will see the Adobe Reader download button located at the bottom of the page. We are excited to offer you this new feature and hope your patrons will be pleased with it as well.

NHLBI Stops Study Testing How Long Children with Sickle Cell Anemia Should Have Blood Transfusions to Prevent Stroke

NHLBI Stops Study Testing How Long Children with Sickle Cell Anemia Should Have Blood Transfusions to Prevent Stroke
Clinical Alert Issued to U.S. Physicians

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/databases/alerts/sickle_transfusion.html

San Diego, CA, Dec. 5, 2004 - The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has stopped early a clinical trial studying whether children with sickle cell anemia at high risk for stroke could at some point after a minimum of 30 months
(range 30-91 months) safely stop receiving the periodic blood transfusions that prevent strokes. The study found a return to high risk of stroke in children who stopped receiving the transfusions. The NHLBI is issuing a clinical alert on the study's results to inform physicians
who treat children with sickle cell anemia.

The alert advises physicians that stopping transfusions cannot be recommended. The document urges them to carefully discuss with patients and their families the stroke prevention benefits of continuing periodic transfusions as well as the risks of these transfusions, which can include such long-term side effects as iron overload. Management of these side effects should also be discussed, according to the alert.

The results of the Stroke Prevention Trial II (STOP II) are being presented in San Diego today as a special "late-breaking" announcement at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH). To further inform physicians, the NHLBI is posting the alert on the
National Library of Medicine's Clinical Alert and Advisories Web page. STOP II investigators are notifying patients enrolled in the study and their families.

STOP II, which began in 2000, expected to recruit 100 patients age 2 to 18 over 6 years. When the study was stopped 2 years early on November 10, 79 patients had been enrolled. At the time the study was halted, 14 of the 41 patients who had been randomly assigned to stop transfusions
reverted to high risk of stroke as measured by a special ultrasound technique and 2 patients had suffered a stroke. There were no strokes or reversions to high stroke risk in the group that continued with transfusions.

"This important study shows the value of continuing periodic blood transfusions in preventing the serious and debilitating consequences of stroke," said NHLBI Acting Director Barbara Alving, M.D. "At the same time, there are risks of chronic transfusions and the decision to continue with this treatment must be made on a case-by-case basis," she added.

The risks of chronic blood transfusions include iron overload, which can be harmful to several vital organs and must be treated with chelation therapy. Other risks include alloimmunization, an immune system reaction which can interfere with the benefits of subsequent transfusions, and exposure to blood-borne infections.

The STOP II trial, conducted at 23 clinical centers in the U.S. and 2 in Canada, enrolled patients at increased risk of stroke. Stroke risk was determined with transcranial doppler (TCD) screening, an ultrasound technique that measures the velocity of blood flow in the brain. A high blood flow velocity in one or more major arteries of the brain is linked with narrowing in key blood vessels supplying the brain, which in turn increases the risk of a stroke.

STOP II participants had been transfused for at least 30 months before entering the trial. Eligibility criteria for entry into STOP II were a normal TCD velocity (indicating low risk of stroke) and a magnetic resonance imaging study of the patients' brain arteries showing no
severe blockages. Upon entry, patients were randomly assigned to receive either standard care with periodic blood transfusions or to be taken off these transfusions.

Patients in the transfusion arm of the study received blood transfusions every 3 to 4 weeks to keep the amount of abnormal, or sickle, hemoglobin in their blood to no more than 30 percent of total hemoglobin. Transfused patients who received a cumulative dose of 250 ml/kg of blood
began to develop iron overload and were given chelation therapy. Chelation involves subcutaneous infusions of deferoxamine, a drug that removes the iron.

After 79 patients had been enrolled in the study, the STOP II Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB), an independent advisory committee charged with reviewing results and ensuring participant safety, conducted a regular review of the data. The analysis showed a highly
significant difference in stroke risk and actual stroke between the transfusion and non-transfusion treatment arms. The DSMB recommended early closure of the clinical trial.

About 10 percent of sickle cell patients are at risk for stroke. Twenty percent of patients are at risk for "silent cerebral infarcts," small strokes that can interfere with cognitive functioning and school performance because brain tissue is damaged.

The importance of transfusion therapy in preventing strokes in patients with sickle cell anemia was established in 1997 when the results of the Stroke Prevention Trial in Sickle Cell Anemia (STOP I) were released in a clinical alert. STOP I found that administering blood transfusions
every 3 to 4 weeks to children with sickle cell anemia who are at high risk for stroke reduces their rate of first-time stroke by 90 percent.

"STOP I showed that we could prevent stroke and its debilitating consequences, including brain damage. What we didn't know was whether the transfusions could be safely stopped at some point. This was an important question because there are some problems with blood transfusions, including increased risk of iron overload," said Robert Adams, M.D. principal investigator of both STOP I and STOP II and Regents Professor of Neurology and Professor of Pediatrics, Medical
College of Georgia. Adams presented the STOP II findings at the ASH meeting.

"Now we know that for high-risk patients, it is not safe to stop transfusions even if the TCD has returned to normal range. We need to weigh carefully the risks of this preventive therapy and make sure we monitor patients closely with TCD. We also need to come up with a better
way to maintain the stroke prevention benefit while lowering the side effects of transfusion treatment," added Adams.

The clinical alert calls for further research to identify and test therapies that will provide safe and effective protection from stroke with fewer side effects than transfusion.

Sickle cell anemia, the most common genetic blood disorder in the U.S., affects about 1 in 350 African-Americans and 1 in 1,000 Hispanic newborns every year. Patients with this disease have abnormal hemoglobin molecules in their red blood cells. The molecules damage the red cells, causing them to stick to blood vessel walls. This can lead to narrowed, or blocked, blood vessels in the brain, causing a stroke.

The participating centers in STOP II were:
Children's Hospital Medical Center; Cincinnati, OH;
Children's Hospital Oakland, Oakland, CA;
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles/UCLA; Los Angeles, CA;
Children's Hospital of New Orleans; Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans, LA
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia; Philadelphia, PA;
Children's Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, MO;
Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC;
Columbia University; New York, NY;
Columbus Regional Hospital, Columbus, GA;
East Carolina University, Greenville, NC;
Emory University; Atlanta, GA;
Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, FL
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD;
Medical College of Georgia; Augusta, GA;
Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, S.C.;
Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA;
Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, Cleveland, OH;
Scottish Rite Children's Medical Center, Atlanta, GA;
Sinai Hospital of Baltimore; Baltimore, MD;
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN;
State University of New York-Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY;
The Hospital for Sick Children; Toronto, Ontario;
University Health Network, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario;
University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL;
University of Mississippi Medical Center Children's Hospital, Jackson, MS;
Note: the New England Research Institute, Watertown, MA, was the Data
Coordinating Center

To interview an NHLBI spokesperson about the STOP II study, please call the NHLBI Communications Office at 301-496-4236. To interview Dr. Adams, call Toni Baker at the Medical College of Georgia at 706-721-4421. The clinical alert is online
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/prof/blood/sickle/clinical-alert-scd.htm


NHLBI is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Federal Government's primary agency for biomedical and behavioral research. NIH is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NHLBI press releases and fact sheets, including a fact sheet on sickle cell anemia, can be found online at www.nhlbi.nih.gov

Friday, December 03, 2004

New e-journal title from BioMedCentral added

A new e-journal title from BioMedCentral has been added today : International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity.
The International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (IJBNPA) is the official journal of the International Society of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (ISBNPA). The ISBNPA is covering the cost of publication, enabling IJBNPA to be an Open Access journal without charge to the authors and is ready to receive papers on the behavioral features of diet and physical activity.

Printing PDF files from e-journals

Frequently, users are confronted with receiving 1 blank page after issuing a print command for a selected e-journal article in PDF format. This occurs when users issue a print command from the browser ( IE, Netscape, Firefox) FILE menu. The latest revisions of Acrobat Reader require the print command to be issued from within the Acrobat reader file itself, using the printer icon.
Users may become confused when several (up to 6 toolbars) may be displaying on the computer screen. The Acrobat Reader toolbar will be the very last toolbar, always starting (from the far left ) with the icon of the floppy disc (save a copy). The second icon in, will be a little printer with paper sticking out from the top. This is the icon to click, in order to issue the print command.

Thursday, December 02, 2004

New BioMedCentral title added: Journal of Inflammation

<>A new BiomedCentral Open access journal has been added to LYMAN today.
Journal of Inflammation is an Open Access, peer-reviewed online journal on all aspects of research into inflammation.

The five classical symptoms of inflammation, namely redness (rubor), swelling (tumour), heat (calor), pain (dolor) and loss of function (functio laesa), are only part of the story. The term inflammation is taken to include the full range of underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms involved, not only in the production of the inflammatory responses but, more importantly in clinical terms, in the healing process as well. Thus the journal covers molecular, cellular, animal and clinical studies, and related aspects of pharmacology, such as anti-inflammatory drug development, trials and therapeutic developments. It also considers publication of negative findings.

Journal of Inflammation aims to become the leading online journal on inflammation and, as online journals replace printed ones over the next decade, the main Open Access inflammation journal. Open Access guarantees a larger audience, and thus impact, than any restricted access equivalent, and increasingly so, as the escalating costs of printed journals puts them outside University budgets.

The unrestricted access to research findings in inflammation aids in promoting dynamic and productive dialogue between industrial and academic members of the inflammation research community, which plays such an important part in the development of future generations of anti-inflammatory therapies.

Edited by Neville Punchard and Cliff Whelan, Journal of Inflammation is supported by an international Editorial Board drawn from the academic and industrial research community.