National Library of Medicine
NNLM Discovery | Mindful Eating for the Beloved Community
updated
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. ET — This talk will be live-streamed globally, and archived on NLM's YouTube Channel and NIH VideoCasting.
Join Dr. Rachael Gillibrand as she explores the connections between eye impairments and the creation of eyeglasses, using the collections of the National Library of Medicine (NLM). The talk will highlight items from her 'ocular impairment' resource collection, accessible through the Medical Heritage Library, as well as materials used in her forthcoming book on premodern disability. Together, we will dive into the pages of historical texts, including Guy de Chauliac's Chyrurgia, Bartholomeus Anglicus' De proprietatibus rerum and the writings of Ambroise Paré, to explore how ocular health has influenced the design of eyeglasses throughout history.
#ai #machinelearning #library
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
She’s featured in Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians, an online exhibition from the National Library of Medicine. Visit the homepage to see more: nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/changing-the-face-of-medicine/index.html.
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #womeninmedicine
Transcript:
(music)
In this tutorial you will learn how to use proximity searching in PubMed.
Proximity searching allows you to search for terms that are close to each other.
For example, to find variations of a phrase.
Let’s say you are searching for variations of the phrase healthcare rationing.
You might want to find: rationing healthcare, healthcare rationing,
rationing of healthcare, or rationing strategies in healthcare.
Proximity searching in PubMed can be used to supplement Medical Subject Heading searches.
In PubMed, you can use proximity searching to search for multiple words appearing in any order within a specified distance of one another in the title field, the title and abstract fields, or the author Affiliation field.
To search for the word “rationing” and the word “healthcare” with no words in between, in the title or abstract fields of the PubMed records, you would type into the search box: “rationing healthcare”[tiab:~0]
Your results include records with: rationing healthcare, and healthcare rationing in the title or abstract.
To search for the word “rationing” and the word “healthcare” with up to one word in between, in the title or abstract fields of PubMed records, you would type into the search box: “rationing healthcare”[tiab:~1]
This would add to your previous search phrases like:
rationing of healthcare, and rationing in healthcare.
To search for the word “rationing” and the word “health care” with up to two words in between, in the title or abstract fields of PubMed records, you would use the same syntax but instead of 1, use the number 2.
This would add to your previous search phrases like: rationing strategies in healthcare.
Using our last example as a template, construct a search for the terms congenital and defect with up to one word in between, in the title field of PubMed.
The title field can be searched with the word title in brackets.
Your results will have records with the terms congenital and defect with up to one word in between, in the title field.
Note that Automatic Term Mapping is not applied to the terms when you do a proximity search.
For comprehensive searches on biomedical terms, you will want to combine proximity searching with other techniques to build your query.
For example, while this search retrieves records with the term “congenital heart defect”…
…there are more than 30 more specific Medical Subject Headings under Heart Defects, Congenital.
You would need to include the MeSH term, either directly or through Automatic Term Mapping, to include these more specific terms in your search.
Proximity searching is a powerful tool that should be used in combination with other searches of PubMed.
For more about proximity searching in PubMed, see the PubMed User Guide.
For expert assistance with your PubMed searches, contact your local health sciences librarian.
Common data elements are a type of health data standard that supports data interoperability, enabling researchers to combine or compare data across multiple studies. CDEs increase statistical power, impact research outcomes, and accelerate discovery. Through the NIH CDE Repository, the National Library of Medicine (NLM) provides access to CDEs from across NIH. Additionally, NIH-Endorsed CDEs have been reviewed and approved by an expert panel, and they meet established criteria. They are designated with a gold ribbon in the Repository. The Repository allows users to search, browse, compare, and export CDEs.
For more health resources, visit NLM at https://nlm.nih.gov.
#ai #biomedicalresearch #dataaccess
clinicaltrials.gov
#clinicaltrials #FastForwardfromClinicalTrials
clinicaltrials.gov
#clinicaltrials #FastForwardfromClinicalTrials
clinicaltrials.gov
#clinicaltrials #FastForwardfromClinicalTrials
and they didn't know it?)
La retinopatía diabética es el daño causado por los vasos sanguíneos de la retina por diabetes. Y es la causa número uno de ceguera en adultos en Estados Unidos que trabajan Por fortuna es tratable y aun reversible si se detecta a tiempo. (Diabetic retinopathy is damage caused to the blood vessels of the retina by diabetes. Diabetic retinopathy is also the number one cause of blindness in working-age adults in the United States. But luckily, it is treatable and even reversible if you catch it early enough.)
English version - youtu.be/WL4_SR3XGks
AD version - youtu.be/pbK2ISTT8FU
Transcripción:
¿Qué pasaría si alguien con diabetes está quedándose ciego lentamente y no lo sabe?
La retinopatía diabética es el daño causado por los vasos sanguíneos de la retina por diabetes. Y es la causa número uno de ceguera en adultos en Estados Unidos que trabajan Por fortuna es tratable y aun reversible si se detecta a tiempo.
No queremos que ningún americano se quede ciego por diabetes. Pero en el área que rodea Charles Drew, el Área 6 de Planeación de Servicios del Condado de Los Angeles, hay 1.1 millones de personas, y no hay suficientes proveedores de atención de salud para la comunidad.
Observaremos a pacientes que se están quedando ciegos a pesar de tratarlos. Vi la necesidad de tratar la enfermedad antes.
Lo que tratamos de hacer es usar la informática, IA y telesalud para reducir las diferencias y ofrecer más acceso a los pacientes. Propusimos al NLM usar el aprendizaje de los aparatos para saber quiénes estaban en riesgo de retinopatía diabética sin saberlo, creyendo estar bien.
Casi toda la inteligencia artificial se ha enfocado en clasificar imágenes de la retinopatía diabética y proveer un resultado de la enfermedad. Pero lo interesante es que estamos observando datos sin imágenes.
Vemos factores de riesgo establecidos y datos demográficos y de laboratorio que ya clasificamos, y los usamos para desarrollar modelos predecibles de retinopatía diabética y saber quién tendrá mayor riesgo de contraerla. Y así podemos dirigir nuestros limitados recursos hacia pacientes que se pueden beneficiar.
Lo que hicimos fue crear un modo de grupo, no individual.
Y pudimos ver una población de 31 mil pacientes no monitoreados, y aplicar el aprendizaje de aparatos a los datos de los 30 mil.
Encontramos unos 7,500 que consideramos de muy alto riesgo de retinopatía por nuestros modelos. Y los instructores de salud bilingües y asistentes de investigación les explicaron la importancia de venir.
Este software nos permite continuar maximizando la capacidad de encontrar los pacientes que más necesitan vernos.
El NML dice, “hagámoslo”. Observemos esto que tanto impacta a una población no muy atendida, y busquemos los fondos. Fue increíble.
Este proyecto no existiría sin la Biblioteca Nacional de Medicina. Creo que es una increíble validación del tipo de trabajo innovador de nuestra red de seguridad, tan impactante para la mayoría de la población de pacientes de los Estados Unidos.
NIH Comparative Genomics Resource (CGR):
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/datasets/cgr
Non-AD version - youtube.com/watch?v=Yi3Ikv1SrdY
To commemorate this milestone, the Audiovisual Program Development Branch produced a 50th anniversary video and graphical timeline which were presented at the September 2018 Board of Scientific Counselors meeting. The video highlights LHNCBC’s major accomplishments encompassing such significant achievements as Visible Human, ClinicalTrials.gov, UMLS, MARS, Genetics Home Reference, and Profiles in Science. The timeline exhibit, prominently featured in the Lister Hill Center lobby, chronicles the parallel history of communications technologies, the evolution of interoperable communications standards and biomedical initiatives over five decades, from early satellite voice and image research and development to today’s trans-NIH Big Data to Knowledge initiative.
For 50 years, the Directors, Board of Scientific Counselors, and the diverse and talented researchers, developers, and LHNCBC staff have worked together to fulfill the 1965 vision of Senator Lister Hill, “We must develop a communications system so that the miraculous triumphs of modern science can be taken from the laboratory and transmitted to all in need.” The Center continues its work devoted to this mission in support of NLM programs and products, for “all in need.”
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #machinelearning #audiodescription #audiodescriptions
To commemorate this milestone, the Audiovisual Program Development Branch produced a 50th anniversary video and graphical timeline which were presented at the September 2018 Board of Scientific Counselors meeting. The video highlights LHNCBC’s major accomplishments encompassing such significant achievements as Visible Human, ClinicalTrials.gov, UMLS, MARS, Genetics Home Reference, and Profiles in Science. The timeline exhibit, prominently featured in the Lister Hill Center lobby, chronicles the parallel history of communications technologies, the evolution of interoperable communications standards and biomedical initiatives over five decades, from early satellite voice and image research and development to today’s trans-NIH Big Data to Knowledge initiative.
For 50 years, the Directors, Board of Scientific Counselors, and the diverse and talented researchers, developers, and LHNCBC staff have worked together to fulfill the 1965 vision of Senator Lister Hill, “We must develop a communications system so that the miraculous triumphs of modern science can be taken from the laboratory and transmitted to all in need.” The Center continues its work devoted to this mission in support of NLM programs and products, for “all in need.”
#humanhealth #medicalhistory #telemedicine #audiodescription #audiodescriptions
Submission guidelines page:
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/info/seq.html
GEO home page:
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo
nnlm.gov/about/regions/region6
Non-AD version: youtube.com/watch?v=8EZgx_atjfo&list=PL7dF9e2qSW0Z9_fpiYtESKT27bMS0mKEK&index=3
On this episode of the NNLM Discovery podcast, Region 6’s Community Engagement Coordinator, Darlene Kaskie, shares how NNLM is sponsoring a series of talks at public libraries with Dr. William Cooke, a physician and author in rural Austin Indiana. Dr. Cooke wrote a book called Canary in the Coal Mine about being the only doctor in a small town that was hit by twin epidemics of substance abuse and HIV. His story examines the social determinants of health that contribute to poor healthcare and offers hope that communities can come together to make sure that every child born has access and resources and choices that they need to be healthy and prosperous.
NNLM donated hundreds of copies of Dr. Cooke's book to all the libraries that hosted the event. The libraries then distributed the books to community organizations such as faith-based groups, rehab centers, counseling services, and public health departments.
The NNLM is the outreach arm of the National Library of Medicine with the mission to advance the progress of medicine and improve the public health by providing all U.S. health professionals with equal access to biomedical information and improving the public's access to information to enable them to make informed decisions about their health. The seven Health Sciences Libraries function as the Regional Medical Library (RML) for their respective region, with Region 6 consisting of: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin. To learn more about Region 6 visit: http://www.nnlm.gov/about/regions/reg....
All of the artwork for this podcast series has been created with a generative AI text-to-image tool! The text prompt for the episode's artwork was " a canary in a coal mine as an abstract painting.”
#audiodescription #humanhealth #HIV #education #audiodescriptions
The audio description in this video provides narration that describes onscreen imagery for users with vision limitations. A non-audio-described version is here: youtube.com/watch?v=TUPjOfeWVf0
Learn more about the MS-FIT study here: https://clinicaltrials.ucsf.edu/trial/NCT05837949
Transcript:
[Music] [Riley Bove, MD] People with multiple sclerosis, MS, are at higher risk of falls
and it can be due from any combination of difficulty with cognitive processing, vision, strength, balance, or maybe rushing because they have to go to the bathroom.
The project that we have submitted to NLM for funding is MS FIT. MS Falls Insight Track.
This is a digital intervention. It was designed by the intended users, so patients, clinicians, and other stakeholders.
And it's designed to improve the reporting around falls and attention to fall prevention.
[Tara Mutukisna] I was diagnosed with MS in 2016. I think it was tripping on the sidewalks and in the road.
It became pretty common and frustrating. As a competitive person, I didn't appreciate not being able to walk straight and not fall.
[Valerie Block, PT] Fear of falling can stop people doing activities. And not doing activities means that they're not out being social.
It can increase depression. It can reduce physical activity which then has a whole slew of different issues.
[Bove] I see a patient every six months and I know that most of the patient's lived experience is outside of that clinical visit.
And for that reason, we needed to build a system that allowed people to collect information about their falls longitudinally in as simple and unobtrusive and patient-friendly way possible.
And ping clinicians, so that we can better intervene when there is a near fall or a fall, and then continue to intervene until all of the sort of fall reduction strategies are in place.
[Mutukisna] The surveys are so straightforward and clear.
So for me, it's just how many falls have you had today or what was the climate that really impacted your walking ability.
[Bove] It's hard for me to see how this process would have been accomplished without funding from the National Library of Medicine because of the time and care that it takes to build things in a way that they're going to succeed with the intended users.
[Mutukisna] I'm just excited that my the doctors of UCSF are allowing me to live my life, not just treat my MS.
#multiplesclerosisawareness #multiplesclerosisfighter #multiplesclerosissociety @ucsf #audiodescription #audiodescriptions
To learn more about resources from the National Library of Medicine, go to learn.nlm.nih.gov
Table of Contents:
0:00 - 1:08: Introduction
1:09 - 2:55: Links to Data Sources
2:56 - 4:48: Links to Outside Sources
4:49 - 5:08: PubChem Help Pages
To learn more about resources from the National Library of Medicine, go to learn.nlm.nih.gov
Table of Contents:
0:00 - 0:28: Introduction
0:29 - 4:10: Chemical Names and Identifiers
4:11 - 4:48: Molecular formula
4:49 - 6:07: Gene Symbols and Proteins
6:08 - 7:13: Pathways
7:14 - 8:11: Taxons
8:12 - 8:46: Cell Lines
8:47 - 9:40: Patent Numbers
9:40 - 9:54: PubChem Help Pages
To learn more about resources from the National Library of Medicine, go to learn.nlm.nih.gov
Table of Contents:
0:00 - 0:27: Introduction
0:28 - 1:39: Line Notations
1:40 - 6:10: Draw a Structure
6:11 - 7:34: Similar Structures, Substructures, and Superstructures
7:35 - 7:54: PubChem Help Pages
dbGaP Submission Guide:
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gap/docs/submissionguide
How to Register a Study: sharing.nih.gov/genomic-data-sharing-policy/submitting-genomic-data/how-to-register-and-submit-a-study-in-dbgap"
In 1973, Dr. R.C. Backus, Executive Secretary of the Tuskegee Syphilis Ad Hoc Advisory Panel, donated to the National Library of Medicine (NLM) photocopies of original correspondence, memoranda, meeting minutes, reports, and scientific articles on the origin, development, and investigation of the US Public Health Service Syphilis Study at Tuskegee. These papers held by NLM constitute a unique historical collection that has informed research led by historians, medical ethicists, and many others across a variety of disciplines. NLM’s stewardship of this collection supports the library’s mission to enable biomedical research, support health care and public health, and promote healthy behavior.
Non-AD: youtube.com/watch?v=O1LE6gED9LI&t=9s
Consult this finding aid to learn more about this collection: findingaids.nlm.nih.gov/repositories/ammp/resources/2934097r
If you wish to study the collection, we welcome you to visit the NLM Reading Room.
Learn more about the NLM archives: nlm.nih.gov/hmd/collections/archives.html
Transcript:
In 1932, the United States Public Health Service began a study of the effects of untreated syphilis on black men in Macon County, Alabama. Participants’ informed consent was not collected.z
“The study initially involved 600 Black men – 399 with syphilis, 201 who did not have the disease. Researchers told the men they were being treated for “bad blood,” a local term used to describe several ailments, including syphilis, anemia, and fatigue. In exchange for taking part in the study, the men received free medical exams, free meals, and burial insurance.
Four decades later, on July 25, 1972, Associated Press reporter Jean Heller broke news about the study, prompting the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, to appoint an ad hoc panel to investigate.
In October 1972, the panel advised stopping the study, and a month later the study was ended.
The panel concluded in their final report that the previous research on African Americans with syphilis was “ethically unjustified.”
At the study's conclusion, only 74 of the original 600 men were still alive. 40 of their wives had been infected and 19 of their children were born with congenital Syphilis.
The Advisory Panel’s investigation led to compensation for the victims of the research and new protocols for the ethical treatment of human subjects of research. Voluntary informed consent for research subjects became the new standard, and an explicit requirement for government-funded research.
In 1997, President Clinton issued a formal Presidential Apology for the Tuskegee Syphilis Study.
During its investigation, the panel collected a broad variety of historical documents and other papers. In 1973, a copy of the panel’s working papers was deposited in the National Library of Medicine, NLM, located on the campus of the National Institutes of Health, in Bethesda, Maryland.
Through this research and related public education made possible by the unique collection held by the NLM, as well as the National Archives, we acknowledge the participants in the Tuskegee study and the injustices they and their families suffered. We also acknowledge the work of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study Ad Hoc Advisory Panel to address the unethical actions of the study which ushered in new protections for the rights of patients, and which continue to evolve with new advances in science and medicine.
The NLM collects and preserves collections such as that of the Tuskegee Study Ad Hoc Advisory Panel to improve transparency in research, and to ensure that lessons of the past inform the present and future of biomedical research, health care and public health, and healthy behavior.
#tuskegee #audiodescription
After watching this video, listen to this week's episode of the NNLM Discovery podcast, Region 6 Communications & Finance Coordinator Miles Dietz-Castel shares the story of Richland County Public Health Director Dr. Julie Chaya’s initiative to combat period poverty in her community of Mansfield, Ohio.
Listen to season 1 of the NNLM Discovery podcast here - nnlm.gov/podcast
Non-AD version: youtube.com/watch?v=hgGcrMdjX0E&list=PL7dF9e2qSW0Z9_fpiYtESKT27bMS0mKEK&index=5
The NNLM is the outreach arm of the National Library of Medicine with the mission to advance the progress of medicine and improve the public health by providing all U.S. health professionals with equal access to biomedical information and improving the public's access to information to enable them to make informed decisions about their health. The seven Health Sciences Libraries function as the Regional Medical Library (RML) for their respective region, with Region 6 consisting of: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin. To learn more about Region 6 visit: http://www.nnlm.gov/about/regions/reg....
#periodpoverty #menstrualawareness #audiodescription #audiodescriptions
Non-AD version: youtube.com/watch?v=Xid-p8QIFuE&t=5s
nlmdirector.nlm.nih.gov/2021/11/10/artificial-intelligence-imaging-and-the-promising-future-of-image-based-medicine
#artificial-intelligence #deeplearning #medical-imaging #ai #audiodescription #audiodescriptions
Non-AD version: youtube.com/watch?v=0-ljV-v2kzI&t=69s
nlm.nih.gov/research/researchstaff/McDonaldClem.html
#humanhealth #bigdata #medicare #audiodescription #audiodescriptions
Non-AD version: youtu.be/Juq8hIyHpZo
LitVar 2.0 website: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/research/litvar2
LitVar 2.0 FAQs: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/research/litvar2/tutorial
Launch announcement: nlm.nih.gov/news/NLM-LitVar-Genetic-Variants-Biomedical.html
#ai #machinelearning #textmining #biomedical #audiodescription #audiodescriptions #research
Non-AD version: youtu.be/ED-E1y9fLe0
nlm.nih.gov/dream-anatomy
#humanhealth #humananatomy #medicalhistory #audiodescription #audiodescriptions