Wednesday, November 9
11 a.m. – 12 p.m. EST
The Covidence 101 training webinar includes a live demo providing an overview of the systematic review workflow and showcases some of our most popular features:
- Settings
- Importing
- Title and Abstract Screening
- Full Text Review
- Extraction 2.0
- Export
- PRISMA
You’ll also get tips and tricks to jumpstart your progress, as well as the opportunity to get your specific questions answered.
Basic Zotero Workshop
Tuesday, November 1
11 a.m. – 12 p.m. EDT
Online Workshop led by Kaitlyn Feyh, HSL Research and Education Librarian
Join us for an introduction to Zotero. Zotero is an open-source citation manager which can help keep your research organized and format your citations appropriately. This workshop will provide an overview of how to best use this citation manager.
Topics discussed will include:
Advanced PubMed Workshop
Thursday, October 27
4 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. EDT
Online Workshop led by Anna Biszaha, Assistant Professor, HSL Research and Education Librarian
Join us for an advanced session on searching in PubMed. This database is one of the top resources to search for almost any health science topic, and the workshop will provide a deeper look at how the database is structured and strategies to refine and optimize your searches.
Introduction to Systematic Reviews Workshop
Wednesday, October 19
12 p.m. – 1 p.m. EDT
Online Workshop led by Stephanie Schulte, Professor, HSL Research and Education Librarian
Join us for an introduction to systematic reviews, a type of research methodology that attempts to find ALL relevant studies addressing a particular question.
Topics to be covered include:
Ohio State Nursing Cape
History
The Ohio State University College of Nursing was founded in 1914 as the Homeopathic Hospital Training School for Nurses within the College of Homeopathic Medicine. In 1922 when the College of Homeopathic Medicine closed, the Training School was placed in the College of Medicine and renamed the University Hospital Training School for Nurses.
Civil War Era Amputation Kit
Information about the Kit
Background: This amputation kit comes from the Civil War era. These kits were used by surgeons for amputations that could in many cases be performed in about ten minutes.
Hot Commodity: During the Civil War, the most common battlefield injury was being wounded by enemy fire. This often led to amputation of limbs to prevent infection from setting in. There were approximately 30,000 amputations performed during the war, and it's predicted that as many as 75% of all Civil War amputees survived.