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Informationists

A special liaison or librarian-in-context program that augments your information resources, saves you and your staff time, and most importantly, enhances the quality of research and patient care. The informationist provides personalized, on-site information services for your team. For more information contact Susan Whitmore at 301-496-1157; or by email at susan_whitmore@nih.gov .

Look for existing groups working with Informationists.

 Barbara Brandys joined the NIH Library in 1997 and became an informationist in 2004. She provides information services to the Laboratory of Comparative Carcinogenesis in Frederick, Maryland, and to the Drug Information Service in the Clinical Center. Barbara has an undergraduate degree in chemistry and has worked as a chemist at W.R. Grace and has worked as a science teacher. Barbara speaks several languages including English, Hebrew, and Polish and works as a volunteer translator in the Clinical Center.  
Barbara Brandys
301.594.6203
brandysb@nihrrlib.ncrr.nih.gov

Diane Cooper
301.594.2449
cooperd@mail.nih.gov

Diane Cooper has a Master's Degree in Library Science from the University of Kentucky, and a BA degree in English from Kentucky Wesleyan College. She is certified by the Medical Library Association at the Distinguished Level. Diane has extensive experience in the corporate environment. She has worked for United HealthCare, Magellan Health Services,and Parexel Inc., a global bio/pharmaceutical services organization. She also has medical center experience, having worked in a Veterans Administration Medical Center and at the University of California, Davis medical library. In addition, she was librarian for the research laboratory of the National Institutes of Drug Abuse and Addiction, Addiction Research Center, at Lexington, Kentucky.

She joined the NIH library July, 2003. As an Informationist, Diane works with

  • Endocrinology services of the National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institutes of Kidney and Digestive Diseases;
  • Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Branch, Center for Developmental Biology and Perinatal Medicine in the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development; and the
  • Indian Health Service headquarters and clinics and health care providers across the US.
Josh Duberman has been an Informationist/Research Librarian at the NIH Library since May 2005. He has a Masters in Library Studies and a bachelor’s degree in chemistry, with 18 years of information research experience at Applied Biosystems Inc. (ABI), SRI International, and as a consultant. Previously, he was a scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and at Chevron Research. He has several patents, and has written numerous articles for professional publications about the information industry, searching techniques and information resources. His areas of expertise and research include intellectual property, chemistry, biotechnology, pharmaceutics, engineering, competitive intelligence and technology transfer resources, and information retrieval issues. Picture of Josh Duberman
Josh Duberman
 301.594.6200
 dubermaj@ors.od.nih.gov
Picture of Janet Heekin
Janet Heekin
301.594.6201
heekin@nih.gov

Janet Heekin joined the NIH Library in April 1998, and is currently employed as a Biomedical Librarian/Informationist. She received a Masters of Library Science from Indiana University in August, 1989, holds a bachelor's degree in sociology from the University of Cincinnati; and fieldwork in mental health and substance abuse counseling.

Prior to coming to the NIH Library, she held positions as a clinical librarian at the University of Pittsburgh, and medical library intern at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Ms. Heekin currently works with research administrators at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), where she provides expert search services in support of evidence-based health practice.

Susan M. Pilch joined the NIH Library in January, 2001, and is currently employed as a Biomedical Librarian/Informationist. She received a Masters of Library Science from the University of Maryland in December, 2001, and holds a PhD in nutritional biochemistry from Cornell University and a bachelor’s degree in biology and chemistry from the University of Virginia.

Prior to moving into the field of information science, she held positions at the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, the NIH Office of the Director, the National Cancer Institute, and the Food and Drug Administration, with varied responsibilities including scientific writing, editing, and review; nutrition research policy and coordination; research program management in diet and cancer; and regulation of health claims and dietary supplements.

 
Susan M. Pilch
301.594.6275 
pilchs@ors.od.nih.gov
 
Rex Robison
301.594.6283
 robisonr@mail.nih.gov

Rex Robison joined the NIH Library in 2006. He has a PhD in biopsychology from Stanford University and a Masters of Library Science from the University of Maryland. Prior to working at NIH, Rex’s employment included reviewing scientific and medical issues in lawsuits and teaching at a community college in Hawai`i. He is currently contributing to the library’s instruction and research teams, as well as serving as Informationist Team Leader. Rex works mainly with groups involved in neuroscience and psychology research.

Mary E. Ryan joined the NIH Library as a Biomedical Librarian/Informationist in December, 2002. Before coming to the NIH Library, she worked for over three years at the National Center for Health Services Research (NICHSR), National Library of Medicine, where she provided research and database development and support for public and private organizations in the areas of public health and health services research.

Prior library experience includes five years as a clinical medical librarian at the Washington Hospital Center, followed by nine years as a clinical librarian and instructor at the George Washington University Medical Center. In addition to a Masters Degree in Library Science (MLS), Ms. Ryan holds undergraduate degrees in education and political science, and earlier work experience includes a U.S. Senate staff position.

 
Mary Ryan
301.451.5861 
ryanm@mail.nih.gov
 
Pam Sieving
 301.451.5862
 sievingp@ors.od.nih.gov

Pamela C. Sieving came to NIH in 2001 from the University of Michigan, where she was Director of Library Services for the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences. Her master's degree in library science is from Southern Connecticut State University; she also holds a BA from Valparaiso University, and an MA in English literature and linguistics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She has also worked at the Yale University Graduate Library, the University of Illinois/Chicago, the Chicago legal office of Kirkland & Ellis, and the graduate library of the University of Michigan. Pam's interests include open access and changes in scholarly communication, how physicians find and incorporate new evidence into their clinical decision-making, epidemiology and evidence-based medicine, and access to information in developing countries. Her responsibilities at NIH include informationist positions for the National Eye Institute and the Clinical Center's tracheotomy care team. She is active in the American Library Association, the Medical Library Association, and chairs the Association of Vision Science Librarians (2005-2007) and she teaches with the US Cochrane Center. She is fluent in several languages, including German and Swedish.

Karen Smith has been a biomedical librarian at NIH since 1994, and joined the Informationist program in 2003.  She received her Masters of Library Science from the University of Alabama in 1985.  As a Clinical Informationist, she works with the Pain & Palliative Care Consult Service, the NIAAA Laboratory of Clinical and Translational Studies, and several branches within the NHLBI intramural program.  
Karen G. Smith
301.594.6273
smithk@nihrrlib.ncrr.nih.gov
 
Tina M. Stiller
301.594.6276  
tstiller@nih.gov
Tina Stiller has been a Biomedical Librarian/Informationist with the NIH Library since May 2005. She received a Masters of Library & Information Science degree in 1998, and holds undergraduate degrees in Dental Hygiene and Health Studies. Tina was employed as a medical librarian at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine for nearly five years prior to coming to NIH. Tina is an experienced clinical dental hygienist and also has experience as a public dental health educator. As an Informationist at the NIH Library Tina works with the National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research.
Nancy Terry began working in the NIH Library in 1995 as a Biomedical Librarian and joined the Informationist program in 2005. In addition to a Masters Degree in Library Science (MLS), Ms. Terry received a BA in psychology from the University of Maryland.

Before coming to the NIH Library she worked for five years as a clinical medical librarian and instructor at the George Washington University Medical Center and for ten years as a clinical medical librarian at the Washington Hospital Center.

As an Informationist for the NIH Library, Nancy works with the NHLBI Center for the Application of Research Discoveries, and for the Office of the Secretary, an HHS agency served by the NIH Library.

Picture of Nancy Terry
Nancy Terry
301-594-6274
terryn@nih.gov


Verma Walker
301.435.8459
walkerve@ors.od.nih.gov

 Verma Walker joined the NIH Library in July, 2004, and is currently employed as a Biomedical Librarian/Informationist. She received her Masters of Library Science from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Prior to coming to NIH, she started up the Clinical Librarian Program at the Medical College of Georgia and worked at the Library of Health Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago. As an Informationist at the NIH Library she works with the Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics at Executive Plaza.

 Anne White-Olson has been at the NIH since 1990, starting off her career here at the National Library of Medicine.  Prior to that she worked as Product Manager for OCLC and a software development company, managing integrated library system development, maintenance and training.  Anne has been at the NIH Library since 2006,  as a Biomedical Librarian, where she worked on the Communications Team, Instruction Team, Information Services Team and the NIH Library Writing Center.

As an Informationist, Anne works with the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD/SPPB) in the development and maintenance of a NIDCD-funded publications database.  She continues to update the NIH Stem Cell Research database, which is available to the NIH community.  Prior to coming to the Library, Anne worked as a Program Analyst in the NIDCD SPPB, where she tracked Federal health legislation, provided support to, and outreach for, the NIH Stem Cell Task Force and contributed to many reports required by Congress.  

Anne has an MLS from the Syracuse University, School of Information Studies.  Her professional interests include: Open Access, user search behavior, database development, knowledge management systems, open government, and health information and health policy.


Anne White-Olson
301.451.5863
whiteols@mail.nih.gov


   
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Web Search: Thinking Beyond Google   
Jan 15  Jan 29  Feb 12  
  
EndNote: Managing Your Search Results   
Jan 15  Jan 29  Feb 12  
  
PubMed: Understanding the Basics   
Jan 15  Feb 12  
  
   
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