The UK MHL Is On Its Way!

At the end of last July, the Wellcome Library, a MHL partner, announced the creation of the UK MHL project. The project plans to digitize about 15 million pages worth of content from ten partners, including UCL (University College London), the University of Leeds, the University of Glasgow, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, King’s College London and the University of Bristol and the libraries of the Royal College of Physicians of London, the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

Over the summer, the Wellcome worked with the Internet Archive to create a large scanning center on Euston Road, capable of housing over a dozen scanning units and thousands of books in process. Fourteen staffers work at the Euston center and they’re currently working through materials from University College London, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Glasgow University Library, and the Wellcome.

Christy Henshaw, Digitization Programme Manager at the Wellcome, has written a great blog post walking us through the process of selection and digitization:

The work begins with the hard copy books in their home libraries. Partner libraries select the books and check condition, size, and suitability for digitisation. They provide accurate inventories, information on special handling requirements where necessary, and carry out any necessary repairs or preparations such as splitting any pesky uncut pages and marking the start and end of books or pamphlets that are bound together. They carefully pack the books into large crates for shipment – and may prepare anything from 4 – 15 crates in a single shipment.

Read the rest of her post here!

Packing books at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh to send to the Euston Scan Centre. Image credit: Iain Milne.

Packing books at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh to send to the Euston Scan Centre. Image credit: Iain Milne.

The Final Week!

Yesterday started the countdown of the final week of our 2014 user survey!

We’re closing it down on November 25th — that’s next Tuesday.

To date, we have over 50 responses, well over our totals in the previous two surveys. Thank you.

If you haven’t taken the survey yet or if you have students or colleagues who should know about the MHL or do use the collection, please take the survey yourself and pass the link on. 

We use this information for planning our future development so every answer is important to us: tell us what you need, what you use, and how you use it so we can get you more of it in the future.

 

Year One of “Expanding the Medical Heritage Library” Is Complete!

We have just submitted our first year report on our second National Endowment for the Humanities-funded grant, “Expanding the Medical Heritage Library: Preserving and Providing Online Access to Historical Medical Periodicals.” Under this grant, we have been digitizing numerous 19th century American medical journals (approximately 1,863 volumes so far!) and we’ve excerpted some of the highlights below.

The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
The College staff were particularly excited about a number of our selections. Among the most significant contributions were 147 volumes comprising the four leading 19th‐century homeopathy journals (American homoeopathist/American homoeopath/American physicianHahnemannian monthly, Homoeopathic physician, and Homeopathic recorder). Additionally, we included the entire run of the Transactions of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, which includes a complete run of all volumes published throughout more than 200 years (volumes were published in 1793 and 1841‐2002). As the holder of the journals’ copyright, the College of Physicians agreed to release these volumes freely into the public domain for this project. The Transactions include proceedings from meetings, lists of Fellows, and detailed appendices that collectively describe how the College of Physicians shaped and engaged with emerging American medical trends.

Columbia University Libraries/Information Services
Columbia digitized 71 titles, the bulk of which came from the last quarter of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th. These were years when U.S. medicine came of age – from its disorganized, underfunded, and generally unscientific state in the immediate aftermath of the Civil War to a powerful, scientifically cutting‐edge, and lavishly financed medical establishment by the end of the First World War. Many of the journals Columbia chose to digitize were created by emerging specialties such as dermatology and venereology; pediatrics; and neurology/psychiatry. They also concentrated on public health and climatology journals knowing that these cover an unusually broad range of topics that appeal to researchers in a wide range of disciplines. Additionally, they included many New York City journals since their holdings of these were usually complete. These included the Brooklyn Medical Journal and its successor, the Long Island Medical Journal (1888‐1922); the long‐running and influential New York Medical Journal (1865‐1922); and two New York German‐language journals: the New Yorker Medicinische Monatsschrift (1852‐53) and the New Yorker Medizinische Presse (1885‐1888).

Yale University’s Cushing/Whitney Medical Library
The titles Yale chose represent a variety of themes, from deafness to dentistry. Yale choose the journals, in collaboration with partners, based on perceived need, as many of the titles were not fully available digitally, allowing Yale to fill in gaps. A significant title selected by Yale was the American Annals of the Deaf and Dumb, a Connecticut journal that holds importance as one of the oldest journals in English that focuses on the education of the deaf.

MHL Housekeeping

This is a brief mid-week post to remind you of two upcoming things.

1. The MHL full-text search will be unavailable between October 24th and October 26th (this weekend) due to a hardware change-over at Harvard. The full collection will be available as usual via the Internet Archive.

This will only affect the full-text search and the search should be back in operation on Monday morning.

2. The countdown to the close of the 2014 User Survey starts next week! If you haven’t already, please take ten minutes out of your day and fill it out. We want to get a sense of how you found us, what you use (or don’t use), and how you use it so we can plan our future development.

It’s very short (we promise!) and an incredible amount of help to us to have your input.

MHL Partner History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group Celebrates 21st Anniversary

The History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group at Queen Mary’s University, London, joined the MHL in 2013; this fall, they are celebrating their 21st birthday.

The research group, funded by the Wellcome Trust, was set up in 1990 to develop and strengthen links between members of the biomedical research community and medical historians.

Continue reading

Request for Comments: Best Practices on Health Records

The Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives of the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions and the Center for the History of Medicine at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, both MHL partners, are in the final stages of  the Private Practices, Public Health:  Privacy-Aware Processing to Maximize Access to Health Collections grant funded by the the Council for Library and Information Resources’Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives program.  Multiple collections at both institutions have been processed under this grant and the partners are now seeking feedback for the best practices documentation that has emerged from the processing. Continue reading

New to the MHL!

Here are a few highlights from the latest items added to our collection; you can add a RSS feed that will give you updates on our new items here.

First, a couple of items with rather immediate topical application:

And some mental health titles:

And lastly, the wonderfully titled….

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Call for Guest Bloggers!

We want you to come write for us!

Have you used MHL materials to write? to teach? to research? to data-mine? to make art? just to read?

Have you thought of a way you’re going to use the material in a future class or project?

Do you see an interesting research path opening up with our material?

If you’re a student, a professor, a high school teacher, an independent researcher, a librarian, or a type of user we haven’t thought of here, we’d love to have you write a post on this blog. Posts should be between 200-500 words (this can be flexible) and relevant to a general academic audience.

To discuss specifics either:

Leave a comment on this post,

Hit us up on Twitter, or

Email us at medicalheritagelibrary@gmail.com.