Volume 24, Number 3 (2005)

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    Table of Contents
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Indiana Libraries
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    From the Editor's Desktop
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Burek Pierce, Jennifer
    This general issue, with its focus on health information, represents a touchstone for me, first because it explores a compelling area of professional interest and also because it is the last issue of Indiana Libraries of my editorship. Connecting with the professionals who have worked on these essays (as well as those that have come before) has been a thought-provoking experience. Essays addressing a range of health information topics written by librarians with diverse insights into health as a professional concern form the content of this issue.
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    Promoting Improved Access to Consumer Health Information
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Kaiser, Josephine
    “Do you have any information on lupus?” “What are the side effects of Prozac?” “I want to find an herbal remedy for arthritis.” Questions such as these are asked each day across the country at public library reference desks. The boom of interest in consumer health, fueled by changes in society and the medical system itself, has strained the infrastructure for dissemination of such information, including at the local public library. In response to this problem, medical libraries, led by the National Library of Medicine (NLM), have explored methods of partnering with public libraries to provide improved consumer health information for their clientele. Cooperation between medical and public libraries has proven to be quite effective.
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    Cover
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Indiana Libraries
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    IN Health Connect: Connecting Local Health Services to Quality-Filtered Health Information
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Richwine, Peggy
    To many librarians, the term MEDLINE has connotations of a huge, complex database that returns far too many citations with little relevance or readability for most library users. And although some might expect that MedlinePlus is more of the same, it is really QFWBFTCHI – quality-filter, web-based, full-text, consumer health information. Unlike MEDLINE, MedlinePlus is relevant and readable for the library user seeking health information. Librarians in Indiana have contributed to a unique dimension of MedlinePlus, IN Health Connect, which offers state residents consumer health information specific to the region where they live. Some background on MedlinePlus prefaces the development of this initiative.
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    Women's Health: Beyond OB/GYNE
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Allison, Melody M.
    We are in the midst of a medical revolution. Biomedical research is finding that women experience health and disease differently … normally … from men. During the past decade there has been a growing momentum to incorporate these findings into medical research and practice.
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    Indiana Libraries Submission Guidelines
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Indiana Libraries
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    Indiana Health Resources: 2004 Update
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Brahmi, Frances A.
    In 1982, I compiled a chapter on Indiana health information resources that was published by the Midwest Health Science Library Network: Basic Library Management for Health Science Librarians, Indiana Edition, 2nd edition. Since then, the World Wide Web has become the provider of choice for such resources, making them more accessible and enabling them to be updated more frequently. This article updates the earlier compilation and includes Web addresses and annotations, as well links to useful databases. Not intended to be comprehensive, it may serve as a starting point for librarians new to Indiana.
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    The Indiana State Department of Health as a Source of Consumer Health Information
    (H.W. Wilson Company, 2005) Maguire, Susan
    Americans are increasingly turning to the Internet for authoritative health information. Even the most conservative statistics estimate that about 40 percent of Americans with access to the Internet use it to obtain health information. These consumer health information (CHI) seekers share a number of characteristics: they use search engines more frequently than recommendations or advertisements; they are concerned about the credibility of online sources; and more than half believe that health information found online is accurate.