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PDF Editor FAQ

What are some publicly available medical databases for research?

Here are some of the databases and archives I have found myself using the most often for medical research, several of them including multiple databases:AAFP [American Academy of Family Physicians] - AAFP Family Medicine JournalsFrontiers - Frontiers | Peer Reviewed Articles - Open Access JournalsJNeurosci [The Journal of Neuroscience] - The Journal of NeuroscienceKargar - https://www.karger.com/JournalNCBI [National Center for Biotechnology Information] - National Center for Biotechnology InformationNPG [Nature Publishing Group] - Home : Nature a - z indexResearchGate - Share and discover researchRSTB [The Royal Society] - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological SciencesScienceDirect - Science, health and medical journals, full text articles and books.The BMJ [The British Medical Journal] - Home | The BMJWiley - Wiley Online LibraryNot all articles are always free, but you can fill some of the gaps by searching alternative databases, or simply Googling the article title until you happen upon a free link (sometimes even in private databases, like pages of the researchers themselves). Sometimes, not even an abstract is shown in a particular database, but you can usually get at least that from alternative sources.You can also try searching for articles that cite what you are looking for, and try to glean information from their quoting, paraphrasing, or arguing from the reference you are interested in.There are many foreign-language articles in some of these databases. Many do not have translated content available anywhere, but you can use a free translator to get a gist. A lot of important work is sometimes only available in other languages, though maybe there exists a database which seeks to specifically provide translated articles.You can also look at listings of databases to find additional ones that might be suitable, like this Wikipedia entry (which helpfully notes which serve free content, and links to additional lists at the bottom of the page):List of academic databases and search engines

How come there are so many papers (open access) published on the coronavirus threat well on time but officials did not take any action? Does it mean scholars failed to bridge the gap between academia and policy?

Hello there Mpho,No, not at all. Have you read these papers and know what to do? Are those in the medical sciences failing to advise the government to the best of their abilities?Officials may not seem to be taking action on the data provided by open access papers. Who reads those open access papers and other research available then advises the officials. The non-scientific officials are not operating by reading and interpreting the papers themselves. They are not usually qualified scientists. Rather they are governmental types with bureaucracies to back them up.However, governments around the world are adding open access (no paywall) to their libraries.The Stephen B. Thacker CDC Library is collecting COVID-19 (2019 Novel Coronavirus) research articles and compiling them into an easily accessible and downloadable database to help researchers find the latest COVID-19 research.[1]This database is updated by systematically searching various bibliographic databases and hand searching selected grey literature sources. The methodology is posted below. Updates are posted every day, Monday through Friday.In addition to this database, there are two other downloadable databases of COVID-19 articles. The World Health Organization’s COVID-19 research [2] is a database of research articles compiled daily by WHO. LitCovid [3] is a database compiled by the National Library of Medicine from COVID-19 articles in PubMed. Both databases’ articles are included in the collection below.A larger comprehensive dataset containing not only research articles on COVID-19 but also research on other coronaviruses can be searched using the COVID-19 Open Research Dataset [4] by the Allen Institute for AI and their partners. It was intended for researchers using natural language processing but also contains more than full text 33,000 articles.While our methods aim to be as comprehensive, exhaustive, and systematic as possible, due to this situation rapidly changing this database may not contain all research published so far. Please check the methodology and the date when this database was last updated to understand what is included.Most publishers are making their COVID-19 content Open Access but some articles that are not Open Access are accessible only to those with a CDC user id and password. Find a library near you that may be able to help you get access to articles by clicking the following links: https://www.worldcat.org/libraries [5] OR https://www.usa.gov/libraries [6]Materials listed in these guides are selected to provide awareness of quality public health literature and resources. A material’s inclusion does not necessarily represent the views of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the Public Health Service (PHS), or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), nor does it imply endorsement of the material’s methods or findings.I am confident the US CDC’s efforts are being duplicated worldwide. If not, use the internet and get your COVID-19 data from Libraries and Archives | USAGov[7] whose last update was 28 Sept 2020.I’m sorry if where yo live they seem to be ignored. However, as stated above access to The Stephen B. Thacker CDC Library (Libraries and Archives | USAGov) is just a click away.CiaoFootnotes[1] COVID-19 Research Articles Downloadable Database[2] Global research on coronavirus disease (COVID-19)[3] LitCovid[4] CORD-19 | Semantic Scholar[5] Find a library near you [WorldCat.org][6] Libraries and Archives | USAGov[7] Library Home | Stephen B. Thacker CDC Library | CDC

What does a university library offer that a public library does not (and vice versa)?

This is complicated. The main difference is that they serve different communities; a public library is for enrichment and community, while an academic environment is for learning and archiving. Here are some important aspects specific to college and university libraries:A university library will have digital access to tens of thousands of journals and conference proceedings in many academic areas; these are the primary resource for researchers in many (if not most) fields todayA university library can have literally millions of volumes, including scientific and other academic books, printed and bound journals, popular press books, recordings (audio, video), artwork, school archival material (box of photos from the 1922 Fall Gala, etc.), rare books, manuscripts… the size and diversity is enormousUniversity libraries at big schools will have special libraries for particular fields and purposes (e.g., the engineering library, the art library, the undergraduate library)University libraries will have extensive study spaces for quiet and group study, computing labs, tutoring centers, etc., although public libraries may have these, tooUniversity libraries will have research librarians whose job it is to help faculty in detailed research projects, and at big schools, they will be discipline-specific (e.g., a law librarian, a medical librarian, a science librarian); these librarians may have faculty rank and/or tenure systemsAs opposed to public libraries:As community centers, public libraries have information about local, state, and federal government programs, including everything from information on tax help to connections to social service programsPublic libraries are often the site of community meetingsPublic libraries are often the site of cultural events, from author speaking events to concertsAs enrichment centers, public libraries focus more on entertainment (popular press books, novels, films, musical recordings)Public libraries have books, other content, and programs for children, young learners, and adult learners (as in, not full-time students, but adults looking to gain skills, including adult literacy and EFL)Public libraries are generally open to all visitors; many colleges and universities restrict access to their libraries

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