Showing posts with label online resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label online resources. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Online Resources: UK Medical Registers,1859-1959

If you’ve ever tried to trace a medical ancestor by wading through the printed volumes of the UK Medical Registers then you’ll be pleased to hear that after a successful trial period, Wellcome Library users now have online access to the Registers through our new subscription to Ancestry Library Edition.

The Medical Registers were published annually, and list all the doctors who were licensed to practice in the UK, including foreign doctors who qualified here. Residence, qualification and date of registration are also included. The online version contains the Registers at four-yearly intervals from 1859-1959, and is available to our registered readers both within the Library and offsite.

The Registers are part of a suite of family history sources on Ancestry Library Edition, including census records, births marriages and deaths, and parish records – all now available online to our registered readers.

More details on how to access the Registers online are available through the Library catalogue.

If you have any queries or suggestions, please email the Library Acquisitions Team on acquisitions@wellcome.ac.uk

Image: Portrait of William Henry Ackland (circa. 1825 - 1898), general practitioner of Bideford, Devon (MS.5418) 

Author: Aileen Cook

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

A quicker search across our key online resources

The Wellcome Library's quick search now has more of our key online resources available at the click of a link. Choosing ‘Article’ in the top left hand corner of the quick search will show you the results of your search term in many of our online resources.
Our previous federated search, Research Pro, already provided an easy way to search a number of key databases in one go. Now we have integrated more databases within our quick search, making it even easier to extend your search beyond the Library catalogues to Library-chosen online resources.
Resources are organised thematically (e.g. ‘Medical Collection’) to help you narrow your search in a meaningful way.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Online resource: Journal of the American Medical Association – all back issues now available

The Library is delighted to announce that we recently purchased access to the complete back files of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), right back to the first issue.

Published continuously since July 1883, JAMA is an international, peer-reviewed journal - the most widely circulated medical journal in the world. Its main aim is to promote the science and art of medicine, and the betterment of public health.

The journal has published a number of landmark studies, such as 'The Etiology of Yellow Fever' (16 Feb 1901); 'The Etiology of Scarlet Fever' (Jan 26 1924); 'The Treatment of Meningococcic Meningitis with Sulfanilamide' (24 April 1937) and 'Live, Orally Given Poliovirus Vaccine' (6 Aug 1960) [1]

The Wellcome Library also subscribes to the current issues of JAMA, so our coverage is complete from 1883 to the present day. Our registered readers can therefore now access the journal from both within and outside the Library.  More details on this resource - and others Wellcome Library readers have remote access to - are available on our website.

[1] A selection of key papers from JAMA - with commentaries from later practitioners - is Harriet S. Meyer, George D. Lundberg (eds). Fifty-one landmark articles in medicine : the JAMA centennial series (Chicago, 1985)

Author: Aileen Cook

Image: Cover of JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 193, No.6, August 9, 1965 (from Osler's Web, John P. McGovern Historical Collections and Research Center, Houston Academy of Medicine)



Saturday, February 18, 2012

New online resources: Your Wellcome Library Paintings, and National Trust Collections

The free online database Your Paintings was launched last year. [1] It makes available information on more than 100,000 paintings in public and private collections in the United Kingdom that are accessible to the public.

The collections include not only art institutions but also for example local government offices, schools, almshouses, libraries and police stations. It is an online counterpart to the printed catalogues of paintings being produced by the charity The Public Catalogue Foundation. Indeed the data for Your Paintings are produced by staff of The Public Catalogue Foundation in collaboration with the contributing institutions, while the website is hosted as a public service by the BBC.

The database is expanding towards its estimated target of 200,000 paintings. This week saw the addition of around 7,000 paintings including 1,291 items from the Wellcome Library. The others added this week include paintings from four other collections in the London Borough of Camden (Royal Free Hospital, Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design (no longer in the City of Westminster but now in its spectacular new home at 1 Granary Square, Kings Cross); the London Borough of Camden collection; and Sir John Soane's Museum) and from seven Liverpool collections forming the National Museums Liverpool.

Five other Camden institutions (British Library, British Museum, Royal College of Physicians, the Foundling Museum, and the Zoological Society of London) will be added shortly, while others such as SOAS, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UCL, and UCL Hospitals Arts, are already there.

Although the Wellcome Library has contributed catalogue data to many other online union catalogues (COPAC, the Karlsruhe Virtual Catalogue (KVK), the National Inventory of Continental European Paintings, OCLC WorldCat, etc.), the Your Paintings database is at present probably the best source from which to display online images of paintings in the Wellcome Library. The cut-off date for inclusion was April 2011: new acquisitions after that date (eight paintings so far) are excluded, as are new attributions and identifications of subjects; it may be possible to add them later. They are of course included in the Wellcome Library catalogue.















Above left, the UCLH "Vesalius" portrait. Above right, the Wellcome Library version (Wellcome Library no. 45840i)
For most people looking at the database there will be surprises. From the Wellcome Library's point of view, the great revelation of the database is the ability to find related paintings in other, hitherto unfamiliar, collections. For instance our neighbour UCL Hospitals have a version of the same Venetian portrait (long regarded as a portrait of Andreas Vesalius) as the Wellcome Library (above left and right).

Finding other works by relatively obscure artists could not be easier. The Wellcome Library has a portrait (right: no. 47408i) of William Russell, a Worcestershire worthy, painted by one Stephen Hewson (fl. 1775-1812): Your Paintings reveals Hewson's itinerant life by showing ten portraits by him from Canterbury, Deal, and Dover, and one of the actor Tate Wilkinson (1739–1803) painted in York. Negative evidence is also useful: we discover that the only two paintings in the database by the still-life painter Gian Domenico Valentino (fl. 1661-1681) are (so far) the two in the Wellcome Library.
Many of the paintings shown here have never been photographed before, while others are the first online reproductions in colour. A notable example is the painting in the Royal Free Hospital of Dame Mary Scharlieb – Memsahib, gynaecologist, surgeon and Christian apologist—by Hugh Goldwin Riviere. The online image (left) portrays passionate commitment shining in her eyes and energy in her body-language. Her costume is also significant: she wears her MD gown while holding what looks like a pair of obstetric forceps.


Another new free online database, National Trust Collections [2], currently has around 750,000 records, about the same as the Wellcome Library catalogue, but of course the items described are much more diverse and are housed in buildings all over England, Wales and Northern Ireland (Scotland has its own separate organization, The National Trust for Scotland).

Like the Wellcome Library catalogue, National Trust Collections interfiles records for books (around 190,000 records), prints, photographs, and paintings, but also for scientific instruments, ethnographic objects and other things. Like Your Paintings, it is well worth a bookmark on the computer of any historical researcher.

[1] Your Paintings: http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings

[2] National Trust Collections: http://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk

Friday, January 6, 2012

Online Resources: ACLS Humanities E-book


Following the Wellcome Library’s recent successful trial of American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) Humanities E-book, we’re delighted to announce that we’re now making this database available to Library readers.

Over 3,300 high-quality monographs in the humanities are included in the collection, and the intention is to add 500 new titles each year. All areas of the humanities are covered, with particular strengths in history - including the history of medicine - archaeology, art history and folklore. The database is a collaboration of the American Council of Learned Societies and over 100 publishers, including the university presses of Cambridge, Oxford and Harvard.

Registered readers can access the database both within and outside the Library. All the books in the database have records in the Library catalogue, so you can either search for specific books, or go to the catalogue record for the database and search within the full-text of all the books included.

Image: Two men and a boy read from a book, one man holds a magnifying glass. Line engraving by N. Cavelli after D. Maggiotto (Wellcome Library no. 16312i).

Author: Aileen Cook

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

We’re trialling a new database: 100 years of UK Medical Registers, 1859-1959


The Library is constantly looking for new electronic resources to complement our printed materials. Our latest trial is to the Ancestry Library Edition, which contains the UK Medical Registers, 1859-1959. We already hold the printed Medical Register for some of that period and it is very popular with many Library users.

We hope that you can spare some time to have a look at the electronic version of the Register to help us to evaluate it and decide whether it would be a useful addition to our collections. Due to licensing restrictions we can only offer access to the Register online from PCs within the Library for the period of the trial, but if you can spare some time we’d be hugely grateful to hear what you think.


The Register
can be accessed from any of the PCs in the Library. To access the Registers from the Ancestry homepage, go to "More Collections" and click on "all databases". From there, search for the "UK Medical Registers" by title or keyword. You can send us your feedback using the online form which can found in the Library catalogue record.

The trial is running until 14 October.


Image: A doctor telling a miserable hypochondriac patient that blood-letting is no longer practiced. Wood engraving after C. Keene. (Wellcome Library no. 15546i)

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Online Resources: Cambridge Journals Digital Archive

The Cambridge Journals Digital Archive is now available at the Wellcome Library.

JISC Collections has purchased in perpetuity on behalf of the higher education community the backfiles of all available Cambridge University Press journals going back to Volume 1, issue 1.
It includes 171 unique titles plus some earlier versions no longer current, published between 1827 and 1996. The available titles include Genetical research, Epidemiology and infection and The Behavioral and brain sciences.

Please note that one of the subject collections (Humanities and Social Sciences, part 2) will not be available until August 2011. That includes the 'history & philosophy of science' titles, such as : Arabic Sciences and Philosophy, British Journal for the History of Science and Science in Context.

Author: Victoria Sinclair

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Online resources: Changes to 'Nature'

As all registered readers of the Wellcome Library enjoy remote access to a number of Nature titles, we thought we would bring you news on how the world's most highly cited interdisciplinary science journal has recently changed.

Nature has been redesigned. It has acquired a new look and feel and the content type has expanded. Some of the changes which should improve site navigation are the inclusion of new navigation bars at the top and to the right of the homepage and a simplified table of contents with colour coded sections.

Content has also been reorganised. 'News and views' now appear alongside the papers and a new landing page for research articles allows readers to browse articles by subject or type. A new page called 'World View' features articles by external authors on current issues. A 'News & Comments' page replaces 'Nature News' and includes news, news features, news blog, editorial and opinions.

To publicise these changes two short videos have been made available through the Nature website. The first features Philip Campbell, Editor-in-Chief, and Tim Appenzeller, Chief Magazine Editor, talking about the vision and the changes. The second video focuses on the changes to both the online and the print journal. These videos have also been posted on Nature's YouTube channel.

Author: Victoria Sinclair