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- Search Terms:ISSN: 15365050AndISSN: 15589439AndVolume Number: 100AndIssue Number: 4AndStart Page: 303AndDate: 2012 Revise Search
- 1From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIt is a popular notion that librarians lead a very easy life, exempt from much of the care, labor and trouble that attend most pursuits of the rest of mankind, and often it is questioned if they are required to spend...
- 2From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedObjective: This study was undertaken to determine if a systematic review of the evidence from thirty years of literature evaluating clinical medical librarian (CML) programs could help clarify the effectiveness of this...
- 3From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe information needs of practicing physicians in seventeen counties of upstate New York were surveyed by questionnaire. A 45.6% response, or 258 usable replies, was obtained. Computer-aided market analysis indicated...
- 4From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe high cost of literature, medical or secular, is a mathematical function of the high cost of living, in other words, of the inflation of values which came in with the World War and went on expanding until the bubble...
- 5From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe fundamental idea of the library must change. The nineteenth-century idea of the library as the embalming of dead genius and the twentieth-century idea of the library as the repository for secondhand knowledge must...
- 6From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION Aims and limitations of this investigation THIS essay will present a historical narrative of medical journals published within the boundaries of the United States before the year 1850. It attempts to...
- 7From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedA description of the development of education for medical librarianship can be brief indeed. Such education has been almost wholly the old apprenticeship method of learning on the job, until within a very few years....
- 8From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedLet me be honest. From the moment I accepted Susan Starr's offer to curate a special supplement to celebrate 100 years of the Bulletin of the Medical Library Association (BMLA)/Journal of the Medical Library Association...
- 9From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedHospital health sciences libraries represent, for the vast majority of health professionals, the most accessible source for library information and services. Most health professionals do not have available the...
- 10From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis list of 358 books and 123 journals is intended as a selection aid for the small library of a hospital, medical society, clinic, or similar organization. Books and journals are arranged by subject, with the books...
- 11From: Journal of the Medical Library Association. (Vol. 100, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedForeword--The (English) "Library Association Record" for August-September, 1917, prints an address made at the opening of the Summer School of Library Service of the University of Wales at Aberystwyth, on July 31, 1917,...