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Association for Veterinary Informatics
NEWSLETTER
January-February, 1996
Design a new logo for the AVI Newsletter...see
details below!
Noell Moseley (Memphis, TN) -
President; Harmon Rogers (Lake Stevens, WA) - President-Elect;
James T. Case (UC-Davis) - Secretary Treasurer; Ronald D. Smith
(Illinois) - Newsletter Editor.
IN THIS ISSUE
- SOCIETY NEWS
-
AVI Newsletter is Now Available as a WWW
Hypertext Document
-
Association for Vet Informatics Logo Contest!
-
How to Contact AVI
-
AHEAD: A NEW ProMED ANIMAL AND ZOONOTIC
DISEASE LIST
-
PRODUCT AVAILABILITY/REVIEWS/COMPARISONS
-
Alternatives to the Use of Live Vertebrates
in Biomedical Research and Testing
-
WebSite for Teachers - Software
Recommendation
-
Professional HTML Tutorial Available Online
Without Charge
-
INTERNET RESOURCES
-
Complementary and Alternative Veterinary
Medicine WWW Site
-
Registry of Reproductive Pathology on the
WWW
-
Veterinary Pathology on the WWW
-
PAHO Launches Web & Gopher Servers
-
NEWS AND COMMENTARY
-
Internet Demographics Survey - Internet's
Reach in Society Grows
-
New Survey Lowers Internet User Estimates
-
MEETINGS AND EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
-
AMIA 1996 Site Visits
-
AIM-96 (Aritificial Intelligence in
Medicine); Stanford, California
-
Toward an Electronic Patient Record '96; San
Diego, Callifornia
-
AMIA 1996 Spring Congress; Kansas City,
Missouri
-
12th Annual Conference on Distance Teaching
& Learning; Madison, Wisconsin
-
European Congress of the Internet in
Medicine; Brighton, United Kingdom
-
1st Virtual-International On-line Pathology
Symposium
-
ITCH'96 - Information Technology in
Community Health; Victoria, BC, Canada,
-
2nd International Conference of Animal
Health Information Specialists; Frederiksberg, Denmark
-
Veterinary Epidemiology/Information
Management Postgraduate Position
-
SUGGESTED READING
-
CLOSING BITS
SOCIETY NEWS
AVI Newsletter is Now Available as a WWW Hypertext Document
Remember when the AVI (formerly AVCS) Newsletter
pointed you to interesting people and resources on the Internet,
but didn't help you reach them? Remember when the online version
of the Newsletter was a plain old ASCII document? WELL TIMES HAVE
CHANGED!
Starting with this issue, I will make available an
HTML-formatted version of the AVI Newsletter for viewing on the
WWW. The url is: http://www.cvm.uiuc.edu/avi/newsletter.html
The
WWW version has a number of features which, when combined, offer
tremendous advantages over hardcopy and plain ASCII:
1. The
Newsletter's format is retained regardless of the platform or WWW
browser that you're using. If you prefer to read hardcopy you can
print out a formatted version right from the web page.
2.
Since links and e-mail addresses are "hot", readers can
instantly check out sites, download products, get more information
about conferences, and e-mail authors for further information. You
can also e-mail AVI officers from within your browser simply by
clicking on their e-mail address. You can submit an item for the
Newsletter either within the body of an e-mail message or as an
attachment.
3. The Newsletter can be saved locally as HTML
or text. I recommend saving as HTML since you can always read it
as a local file with your WWW browser while conserving the
hyptertext links.
4. Having an electronic version makes it
easy for you to share items with colleagues around the
world.
Please take time to check out the WWW version of the
Newsletter. At the present time I'm sharing the url only with AVI
members who receive the Newsletter (hardcopy or electronic).
However, if we really want to promote the cause of veterinary
informatics shouldn't we make it public? Given the advantages of
the WWW version of the Newsletter, can we then do away with the
hardcopy printing and distribution (and associated costs)?
We
would really like to hear your
comments.
RD Smith
Editor, AVI
Newsletter
Association for Vet Informatics Logo Contest!
As you might be aware by now, the membership of the
American Veterinary Computer Society recently voted to change the
name of the Society to the Association for Veterinary Informatics.
This change of name also reflects the change of emphasis of the
organization to one which has broadened its horizons to include
all aspects of information technology, information science,
library science, computer aided instruction, etc.
We now
need a new logo that reflects this change and represents the broad
interests of our members. This email note announces a contest in
which indivuduals are invited to submit their own design for the
new AVI logo. The rules are as follows:
1. All submissions
to the contest must be submitted in either camera ready hardcopy
(full color acceptable, greyscale preferred) or in one of the
following electronic formats: PCX, TIFF, PICT, CDR (CorelDraw),
WMF, GIF, JPEG, AI, or EPS. All submissions on disk must be on
3.5" diskette.
2. All submissions must be original
works.
3. All submissions must include a release of
copyright to the AVI and become the property of the AVI upon
receipt.
4. Each person can submit as many logos for
consideration as they desire.
5. Submissions will be
reviewed by the AVI Executive Board and a winner selected. The
winning logo will be included in the following issue of the AVI
newsletter.
6. The winner(s) will receive one year full
membership to the AVI.
Mail all logo submissions to:
Dr.
Jim Case Secretary/Treasurer, AVI 2742 Concord Avenue Davis,
CA 95616
Electronic submissions can be sent as binary email
attachments to: JCase@cvdls.ucdavis.edu
How
to Contact AVI
Applications for membership,
accompanied by a check for $35 payable to the AVI, should be sent
to:
Dr. James T. Case; Secretary Treasurer, AVI; 2742
Concord Ave.; Davis, CA 95616 Phone: 916/752-4408; FAX:
916/752-5680; e-mail: JimCase@aol.com
Dr. Case is responsible for distribution of the hardcopy
version of the AVI Newsletter.
Newsletter items can be sent
to:
Dr. Ronald D. Smith, Newsletter Editor, AVI;
VMBSB; 2001 South Lincoln; Urbana, IL 61801. Phone:
217/333-2449; FAX: 217/333-4628; e-mail: rd-smith@uiuc.edu
If you are an AVI member and would like to be on the AVI
Newsletter electronic distribution list, send an e-mail message to
the Newsletter Editor. Although the electronic version is only an
ASCII (text) file, it's faster, searchable, easier to store and
retrieve, and environmentally friendly.
Current and past
issues of the Newsletter can be searched, read and downloaded from
the WWW at http://netvet.wustl.edu/avi.htm.
They can also be downloaded from the AVMA's Network of Animal
Health (NOAH -
CompuServe), and the Associations and Foundations Library of the
Veterinary Information Network (VIN
- America Online).
AHEAD: A NEW ProMED ANIMAL
AND ZOONOTIC DISEASE LIST
by
Martin
Hugh-Jones ProMED-AHEAD Moderator
In order to expand the animal and zoonotic disease components
of ProMED, a separate sublist, PROMED-AHEAD, was set up through a
grant to the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) from the
Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation. It is to accommodate subscribers
who prefer to receive only animal and zoonotic disease postings.
The name reflects its intended content, i.e.
AHEAD = Animal
Health/Emerging Animal Diseases
I
agreed to review the animal and zoonotic disease reports and act
as the AHEAD moderator, having been through a reviewer internship.
The membership lists were scanned for veterinarians to ensure that
we had an adequate starting critical mass interested in emerging
and possibly-emerging animal diseases. And like everything else,
it seemed clearer before it began in December, 1995.
The
frequency of ProMED-AHEAD postings depends on the number of
reports on animal diseases, including vector-borne diseases that
have animal as well as human hosts, and zoonoses; and if it's a
current outbreak/update I add -EDR. One of the ongoing problems
has been the zoonotic diseases, whose naturally heavy veterinary
component has on occasion generated a negative reaction amoung a
few physicians and their complaints. However, the three moderators
have a constant running commentary in the background as we try to
balance what appears over the net. With a collective wide spectrum
of colleagues and reliable experts worldwide, _rumors" are
checked and rechecked for substance before they appear. The
moderators try to provide a safety net for contributors, as well
as filtering out the angry _flaming'.
We don't always get
it right. When we stumble, as we do, we are soon informed,
fortunately usually in a friendly manner. To be frank, it is
greatly appreciated as errors can then be corrected and it
confirms to us that people are listening. The individual character
and content of AHEAD is emerging. While we have an internal
information collecting and indentification organisation, including
translators, ProMED depends on the participation of its members.
If they don't send in reports, if they fail to comment, it must
eventually lose momentum and fail. What we have noted is that
those who make contributions gain positive recognition. For
example, look at the difference of Australia on ProMED before and
since the reporting of the equine morbilli virus outbreak; we
worked hard on the Oz CVO and his staff to persuade them to use
ProMED.
At this time ProMED has over 3,500 subscribers in
over 100 countries. Experience indicates that the majority are
_biologicals" -- veterinarians, microbiologists, physicians,
epidemiologists, biochemists, parasitologists, health
administrators, academics, whatever -- the rest are journalists,
editors of newsletters, general public, missionaries, students.
There is a wide range of international and national agencies
represented. For example:
International: ESCAP, FAO, OIE,
PAHO, Unicef, USAID, WHO, World Bank
USA: USDA, FWS, CDC,
EPA, FDA, GAO, NASA, NBS, NIH, NIAID, NIMH, NCI, VA; hospitals;
USAMRIID, WRAIR, NAMRU, NAMRID, Army, Navy, Air Force &
Marines; Red Cross; State Epidemiologists from 18 states (at last
count).
Other Nationals -- a few examples: Pasteur
Institutes (in France, Tahiti, New Caledonia, Senegal), London
School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Health Canada,
Agriculture Canada, Chief Veterinary Officers of Australia &
New Zealand, national epidemiologists of Sweden &
Zimbabwe.
This makes for a major strength of ProMED ... it
forms a readily available global resource of experience available
to be asked. Similarly the non-medical professionals, especially
journalists, form a key component as they tell us of new events
below the medical or veterinary horizon. For example, I lately
received a key series of reports of anthrax in Azerbaijan from
journalists in Baku but which was not being reported by the
relevant Ministries. So if some subjects are being spelt out
without technical jargon and with normally initialed tests in
full, it is because of the multidisciplinary membership and others
who may be totally unaware of what these terms mean.
Background
on the ProMED Initiative
ProMED was created 1992 as an
initiative of the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) to
explore how a global reporting system might be structured and
implemented. It was formally launched in September 1993 at a
Geneva conference co-sponsored by the World Health
Organization.The ProMED Electronic Network was inaugurated on the
Internet in August 1994 by FAS to serve as a prototype for the
communications system that will be needed to monitor emerging
infectious diseases globally. Since that time several national,
regional and international agencies have drawn up plans for
monitoring and responding to outbreaks of infectious diseases.The
ProMED Electronic Network will likely continue, even after a
formal global program is established.
Funding for the
ProMED initiative comes from grants to the FAS Fund, the
tax-deductible arm of the Federation of American Scientists, a
Washington-based center of policy research, analysis and
education. Current funders are The Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation
and The Rockefeller Foundation. Additional support comes from
SatelLife, a non-profit group based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Since August 1995 the ProMED Electronic Conference has been
carried free of charge over SatelLife's HealthNet, a system of
low-cost ground stations linked to low-orbit satellites which
provide communications to health workers in 16 African and 4 Asian
countries, some of whom are based at remote outposts. Healthnet
has been extraordinarily valuable in exchanging information
globally.
Behind this initiative are numerous recent
episodes of emerging and re-emerging infections, including the
global AIDS pandemic, the continuing spread of dengue viruses, the
now frequent appearance of hitherto unrecognized diseases such as
the hemorrhagic fevers, the resurgence of old scourges, like
tuberculosis and cholera, in new and more severe forms, and the
economic and environmental dangers of similar occurrences in
animals and plants. The plant component is being expanded and the
necessary expertise recruited. We expect this to be in place and
fully functioning within the next six months.
Who's Who
in ProMed
Jack Woodall, director of the arbovirus
laboratory of the New York State Department of Health at Albany
and Chairman of the ProMED Communications Task Force, is the
ProMED List Moderator; he also covers certain viral infections and
diseases, and is an avid web-surfer. Contact him at
<woodall@wadsworth.org>.
Stephen
S. Morse, professor of virology at The Rockefeller University, is
Chair, ProMED Steering Committee and acts as the Moderator for all
other human diseases,announcements, and junk mail. Contact him at
<morse@rockvax.rockefeller.edu>.
Martin
Hugh-Jones, director of the WHO Collaborating Center for Reference
and Training in Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
for Veterinary Public Health at Louisiana State University, is the
Animal Disease List (AHEAD) Moderator. You may send animal reports
directly to him at <mehj2020@bonnet.vetmed.lsu.edu>
or post them to <owner-promed@usa.healthnet.org>.
Pamela
Anderson, plant pathologist at the CIAT-Virology Research Unit,
Cali, Colombia, is developing the plant dimension of ProMED. She
can be contacted at <P.Anderson@cgnet.com>.
Barbara
Hatch Rosenberg, professor at the State University of New
York-Purchase, is Project Coordinator. Contact her at
<bhrosenb@purvid.purchase.edu>
The
ProMED Steering Committee and distinguished Members of the Working
Groups on human, animal and plant disease include leading experts
from 40 countries. To receive current lists, contact
<dpreslar@fas.org>.
The Animal Disease (AHEAD) component of ProMED is
coordinated by Dorothy B. Preslar, Washington ProMED Officer at
the Federation of American Scientists; she scans the nets and
finds the reports that the AHEAD Moderator misses. Contact her at
<dpreslar@fas.org>.
Subscriber
Choices
Subscribers may now choose among 4 lists:
*
promed: all reports (human, animal, plant emerging diseases)
*
promed-digest: cumulated reports - all topics as above
*
promed-edr: current emerging disease reports and updates only
(human, animal, plant)
* promed-ahead: Animal
Health/Emerging Animal Diseases
Subscribing
To
subscribe to the ProMED electronic conference, send e-mail
to:
majordomo@usa.healthnet.org
Leave the Subject
line blank (or put anything you like there), and write:
subscribe
promed
or subscribe promed-digest
or subscribe
promed-edr
or subscribe promed-ahead
in the text
space. You will receive an automatic reply with information on how
to access past files. From then on you will receive the messages
posted to the ProMED conference as they are received, and can post
messages to the network.
On the World Wide Web ProMED is
at:
http://www.healthnet.org/promed.html
MARTIN
HUGH-JONES ProMED-AHEAD Moderator
PRODUCT
AVAILABILITY/ REVIEWS/COMPARISONS
Alternatives to the Use of Live
Vertebrates in Biomedical Research and Testing
From:
owner-newjour
gopher://gopher.nlm.nih.gov:70/00/teh/animals/.abtehalt.txt
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
ALTERNATIVES TO THE USE OF LIVE VERTEBRATES IN BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH
AND TESTING (formerly ALTERNATIVES TO ANIMAL TESTING)
This
bibliography is produced quarterly by staff of the Toxicology and
Environmental Health Information Program (TEHIP) of the
Specialized Information Services Division (SIS) of the National
Library of Medicine (NLM) from searches performed in MEDLARS
databases.
The focus of the bibliography is to assist in
identifying methods and procedures helpful in supporting the
development, testing, application, and validation of alternatives
to the use of vertebrates in biomedical research and toxicology
testing. Relevant citations in the bibliography are organized by
subject and include abstracts if available.
If it is more
convenient, files corresponding to individual issues can be
downloaded from the NLM anonymous ftp server at:
nlmpubs.nlm.nih.gov
Inquiries regarding this bibliography may be sent via e-mail
to:
sidney_siegel@occshost.nlm.nih.gov
WebSite for
Teachers - Software Recommendation
Posted to:
VETINFO@wuvmd.wustl.edu By: "Ken Boschert"
<KEN@WUDCM.WUSTL.EDU>
This
is *NOT* an advertisement, but is a recommendation. I have no
connection with O'Reilly other than using their Website product,
and after suffering with one too many different versions of other
webserver software....I can't believe what a good deal this is,
you're getting solid webserver software for US$99 ($400 off list
price), that is, if you're in the Educational field, in the US or
Canada, and if you do Windows NT or 95.
$99 is very
reasonable, and if you're even thinking about putting a webserver
up on the Net, here's where you start. My own NT server (NetVet)
handles about 2500 logins a day (equivalent to 40000 hits) and
hasn't stuttered a bit. I had Website up and running out of the
box in a couple of hours and have yet to read the documentation.
Very highly and enthusiastically recommended. Below is the product
literature they sent me.
Ken Boschert, DVM
-------
Forwarded Message Follows -------
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
October 31, 1995
CONTACT: Mary Leal (Phone:
707/829-0515; e-mail: mary@ora.com)
O'REILLY'S
WEB SERVER KIT FOR THE CLASSROOM
SEBASTOPOL, CA --
O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. announces WebSite for Teachers, a
World Wide Web server packaged and priced for classroom use.
WebSite, a feature-rich World Wide Web server, allows
Windows-using educators to create and "serve" electronic
information -- make it available on an internal computer network
for students only or on the Internet to any of the Web's estimated
eight million users. With WebSite, a PC with Windows 95 or Windows
NT, and an Internet connection, any teacher can build a collection
of interconnected documents that can include text, graphics, and
even sound and video into a web site.
WebSite for Teachers
is O'Reilly's expanded server kit tailored for educators. It is
comprised of three components: the complete commercial WebSite
package, a white paper written by Mark Sheehan of Indiana
University entitled "Classroom Use of the World Wide Web",
and a copy Ed Krol's bestselling guide to the Internet The Whole
Internet for Windows 95 . With teachers and their limited
resources in-mind, WebSite for Teacher is priced at an affordable
$99.00, as compared to WebSite's list price of $499. WebSite was
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WebSite
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who want to start publishing on the Internet. It is a 32-bit World
Wide Web server with remarkable power and flexibility and with the
ease of use of a Windows application. Its intuitive graphical
interface and easy Install make it a natural for Windows users.
Using CGI (Common Gateway Interface), users can run a desktop
application like Excel or Visual Basic from within a Web document
on WebSite. Its access security lets administrators control which
users have access to different parts of the Web server.
"The
White Paper on Classroom Use of the World Wide Web" by Mark
Sheehan, an educator and Senior Manager of Public Services at
Indiana University, discusses how the Web helps to create an
information-rich learning environment and how it can play an
integral role in any class. The paper explains how the Web can be
put to use: to serve static administrative and dynamic
information, to distribute lecture notes, readings and even a
textbook, to provide hypertext links to related electronic
information, to foster collaboration among teachers, to market a
class to interested students, and to publish. The paper also
covers some of the potential drawbacks of using the Web, but ends
encouraging educators to put this technology to use.
The
Whole Internet for Windows 95 , written by the bestselling
Internet author Ed Krol, is the most comprehensive introduction to
the Internet available today. It shows users how to take advantage
of the vast resources of the Internet with Microsoft Internet
Explorer, Netscape Navigator, Microsoft Exchange, and many of the
best free software programs available from the Net. It also
includes an introduction to multimedia for PCs and a catalog of
interesting sites to explore.
To set up a WebSite server,
Windows 95 users need the following system requirements: a 386 or
higher; VGA video display adapter; 3.5" disk drive; 12 MB RAM
(16 MB recommended); 5 MB free disk space; TCP/IP connectivity;
and of course, Windows 95 or Windows NT 3.5.
WebSite for
Teachers is available to all K-12 and Higher Education teachers of
all disciplines in the US and Canada. Orders must be FAXed or
mailed on school letterhead with pre-payment or on a school
purchase order and the kit must be shipped to a school address.
WebSite for Teachers is $99 (US), plus tax and shipping.
ABOUT
O'REILLY & ASSOCIATES
O'Reilly & Associates is
recognized worldwide for its definitive books on the Internet and
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WebSite is a trademark of O'Reilly &
Associates, Inc. Windows 95 is a registered trademark of Microsoft
Corporation
WebSite for Teachers Available November 6,
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O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. * 103A Morris Street *
Sebastopol, CA 95472 (707)829-0515, ext. 254 or 800-998-9938, fax
(707)829-9043, mary@ora.com
O'Reilly Online
WebSite Central: http://www.ora.com/
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Web Review:
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Professional
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INTERNET RESOURCES
Complementary
and Alternative Veterinary Medicine WWW Site From: Jan
Bergeron <jan_bergeron@Merck.Com>
This
is to announce the existence of a new World Wide Web site dealing
with Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine. This site
has been developed by me and Susan Gayle Wynn, DVM. It is
primarily a reference site with listings of Associations,
Manufacturers of Premium (Natural) Foods, Books, Periodicals, Book
Suppliers, and a Directory of the American Holistic Veterinary
Medical Association. There is also an introduction that explains
Complementary and Alternative Medicine, and there are a couple of
initial articles by Dr. Wynn.
Some of the pages are not yet
complete, but we are far enough along to announce the availability
of the site. Please come and visit us and let us have your
comments. We hope this will become the primary site on the web for
information on Complementary and Alternative Veterinary
Medicine.
The URL is:
http://www.monmouth.com/~altvetmed/
J
A Bergeron VMD, Associate Editor, The Merck Veterinary
Manual bergeron@merck.com
or
jbergeron@monmouth.com http://www.monmouth.com/~jbergeron/ http://www.monmouth.com/~altvetmed/
Registry
of Reproductive Pathology on the WWW From:
cummins@possum.murdoch.edu.au
(Dr Jim Cummins)
"The International Registry of
Reproductive Pathology is a collection of more than 20,000
accessions dealing with diseases in reproductive tracts of
domestic animals. The Registry consists of histologic slides,
preserved gross specimens, color transparencies, paraffin blocks,
wet tissues, and case histories, all of which are cross indexed.
The collection is also computerized to allow searching by
signalment, organ or morphologic diagnosis. Specimens include
large numbers of domestic animals (cattle, swine, sheep, goats,
horses, dogs and cats) as well as laboratory animals and exotics.
Consultation or submission of additional material dealing with
reproductive pathology is welcome."
The Homepage is
at:
http://www.cvm.uiuc.edu/homepages/gfoley/Foley.html
and it's run by
:
Dr. George L. Foley; Department of Veterinary
Pathobiology; College of Veterinary Medicine; University of
Illinois; 2001 South Lincoln Ave; Urbana, Il 61801 voice: (217)
244-8310 fax: (217) 244-7421 e-mail:
g-foley@uiuc.edu http://www.cvm.uiuc.edu/homepages/gfoley/Foley4.htm
Veterinary Pathology on the WWW From:
zacharyJ@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu
Veterinary
Pathology, an international journal of natural and experimental
disease, publishes manuscripts, reviews, brief communications,
case reports, editorials, letters, and advertisements for
employment opportunities and new products. Abstracts, instructions
to authors, manuscripts in-press, and other valuable
information.
http://www.cvm.uiuc.edu/HomePages/JFZachary/VetPathol
PAHO Launches Web & Gopher Servers From:
Mr. Eunsik Kwak <KWAKEUNS@PAHO.ORG>
Pan
American Health Organization, DC USA
The Pan American
Health Organization (PAHO) has launched its Web Server, containing
information on Public health and related issues in the
Americas.
Visit the Web and Gopher servers at
http://www.paho.org gopher://gopher.paho.org
Contact: webmaster@paho.org
NEWS AND COMMENTARY
The following
two reports give strikingly different estimates of the level of
Internet usage in the U.S. It's your choice whom to believe. (AVI
Newsletter Editor)
Internet Demographics Survey -
Internet's Reach in Society Grows
KARA SWISHER,
Washington Post staff writer, reports that a major survey about
the Internet released in October (I presume this was 1995, Editor)
indicates that its reach has extended far beyond a small cadre of
elite computer users and is becoming increasingly popular among
the general public.
The poll, conducted by Nielson Media
Research for CommerceNet, a group of businesses interested in
promoting electronic commerce, concluded that about 37 million
people in the United States and Canada have access to the
Internet--representing about 17 percent of the total population
over the age of 16--either through work, at home, through friends,
or via a commercial online service.
Of that number, about
24 million adults had signed on in the 90 days previous to the
survey's release.
The poll--called the Internet
Demographics Survey--is one of many in recent months attempting to
give businesses a better understanding of who exactly is using the
Internet, which has been touted, according to Swisher, as "the
next big marketing opportunity." The Neilson Company
conducted the pool by making random telephone calls to households
and interviewing 4,200 people--both users and nonusers--allowing
the survey to project the results onto a larger population.
Following is information contained in a chart, "Who's on the
Internet," accompanying the Post article:
Number of
Users: 11 percent of the U.S. and Canadian population 16 years or
older--4 million people--used the Internet in the 3 months
preceding the poll's release.
Gender: 66 percent of users
are males, and males account for 77 percent of online time.
Age:
53 percent of users are between 16 and 34.
Frequency: 31
percent of users access the Internet every day.
Users spend
an average of 5 hours and 28 minutes online per week.
Salaries:
25 percent of Web users have an income of more than $80,000 a
year, compared with 10 percent of the general
population.
Education: 64 percent of Web users have a
4-year college degree, compared with 28 percent of the general
population.
New Survey Lowers Internet User Estimates
From Edupage <educom@educom.unc.edu>
A
new survey by New York-based Find/SVP pegs the number of U.S.
Internet users at 9.5 million, far below the findings of a
disputed Nielsen Media Research survey a couple of months ago,
which had reported 24 million North American users. The Find/SVP
study also estimated the number of U.S. Web users was about 7.5
million. (Wall Street Journal 12 Jan 96 B2) Meanwhile, a survey
conducted by the Emerging Technologies Research Group shows
Internet users spending an average of 6.6 hours a week on the Net,
time previously spent watching TV, listening to the radio or
making long-distance phone calls. The average session was 68
minutes. Women are twice as likely as men to use the Internet
exclusively for business. (Tampa Tribune Jan 12 96 B&F1)
MEETINGS AND EDUCATIONAL
OPPORTUNITIES
AMIA 1996 Site Visits
Looking for a way to
further your informatics education this year? Take advantage of
AMIA's (American Medical Informatics Association) site visit
program. The program is designed to demonstrate several of the
major academic systems in the U.S. The fee for each site visit is
$25 for students, $100 for AMIA members, and $200 for non-AMIA
members. Visitors are responsible for making their own travel and
hotel arrangements. For further information and a brochure call
the AMIA office at 301/657-1291.
March 27-29,
1996 AIM-96 (Aritificial Intelligence in Medicine);
Stanford, California See the September-October,
1995 AVCS Newsletter for details.
May 11-19,
1996 Toward an Electronic Patient Record '96; San Diego,
Callifornia For more information call 617/964-3923 or e-mail
cust_service@medrecinst.com
June
5-8, 1996 AMIA 1996 Spring Congress; Kansas City, Missouri
"Conquering Distance:
Teleinformatics-Telemedicine-Telehealth" For more
information write: AMIA; 4915 St. Elmo Avenue; Suite 401;
Bethesda, MD 20814
August 7-9, 1996 12th Annual
Conference on Distance Teaching & Learning; Madison, Wisconsin
Call for Conference Sessions and Exhibits 12th Annual
Conference on Distance Teaching and Learning August 7-9,
1996 Madison, Wisconsin
Theme: Designing for Active
Learning
Session proposals are due March 1, 1996
The
Conference Planning Committee of the 12th Annual Conference on
Distance Teaching and Learning invites you to contribute to the
professional knowledge provided at this event by presenting a
session that relates to the conference theme. We also invite
exhibits and demonstrations of distance education resources,
courseware and technology.
Plan to join nearly 900
colleagues from around the world at this leading forum on distance
education and training. Practitioners, managers and researchers
from education, business and industry, and government agencies
will come together to exchange information and explore new
developments at this 12th Annual Conference.
To receive a
brochure that describes how to prepare and submit a proposal,
please call 608-265-4159 and ask for a brochure for the Call for
Conference Sessions and Exhibits for the 12th Annual Conference on
Distance Teaching and Learning.
The brochure is also
available on the World Wide Web and gopher and via automated
e-mail, anonymous FTP and fax-on-demand.
WWW:
http://www.uwex.edu/disted/home.html
point
your gopher at: epdgopher.engr.wisc.edu
FTP to: epd.engr.wisc.edu
go
to the directory named epdfiles transfer the file named
DISTED11
e-mail to: listserv@epd.engr.wisc.edu
in
message type: send disted11
October 14-17, 1996 European
Congress of the Internet in Medicine; Brighton, United Kingdom
General Information:
MEDNET 96 is the European
Congress of the Internet in Medicine. The aims of the conference
are to bring together researchers, developers and users involved
in the application of the Internet in medicine.
It will
provide a forum for those interested in exploring the role of the
Internet in medicine, to present research, discuss developments,
attend tutorials, workshops and panel discussions. A virtual
medical conference will be held on the World-Wide-Web for the
duration of the Congress.
The Congress will also feature a
major commercial exhibition.
The Conference language will
be English.
Contributions in the form of paper
presentations, workshops, tutorials, posters on all areas where
the Internet is exerting an influence on medicine and medical
science. Virtual posters on all areas of medicine are also welcome
for the virtual medical conference.
Topics will
include:
Access to Information Authoring
Environments Business and Marketing Clinical and
Non-Clinical Applications Commercial Use Digital
Libraries Electronic Publishing Ethical Issues Information
Policies and Management Medical Education Including
Undergraduate and Continuing Network Standards Regulations and
Politics Security Telemedicine Enhanced and Virtual
Reality in Medicine
Call for Papers:
Authors are
invited to submit abstracts of papers on any of the Congress
topics of no more than 200 words for consideration by the
Scientific and Technical Committee. Abstracts that may be
submitted for consideration include those that have not previously
been published in another forum, or are not currently being
published or reviewed by another journal or conference.
All
abstracts will be refereed for quality and originality. The
Committee reserves the right to accept the abstract as a paper or
poster presentation.
All accepted abstracts will be
published in the congress proceedings. In addition outstanding
papers will be invited for publication in a special conference
edition of the Journal of Medical Informatics.
Abstracts
intended for submission should be submitted using the appropriate
submission form via the MEDNET World-Wide-Web site
(http://www.mednet.org.uk/mednet/mednet.htm)
For further details e-mail: info@mednet.org.uk
Clive Baldock; Medical Physics Department; Brighton Health
Care NHS Trust; Royal Sussex County Hospital; Eastern Road;
Brighton BN2 5BE; United Kingdom Tel. 01273 696955 ext
4387 Fax. 01273 664503 URL:
http://www.rsch.org.uk/rsch/baldock1.htm
October 15-20, 1996 1st Virtual-International
On-line Pathology Symposium
From: "Anil K Dhiri,
DVM.MBA" <piscescd@DIRCON.CO.UK>
Web
Page: http://www.pathit.com/symposia
Preliminary Announcement and Call for Papers
The
on-line symposium will be hosted by PathIT Webserver, publishers
of the PathIT (ISSN 1360 7111) newsletter for pathologists. Papers
on following topics are invited for consideration by the Symposium
Committee:
TOPIC CODE
Advances in Clinical Pathology
(ClinPath) Cardiovascular Pathology (CVS) Carcinogenesis
(Carc) Cytopathology (Cyt) Forensic Pathology
(Foren) Gastro-intestinal Pathology (GIT) Haematopathology
(Haem) Hepatic Pathology (Hep) Maxillo-facial Pathology
(MaxFc) Morphometric Pathology (Morph) Occular Pathology
(Occular) Pathology Informatics (IT) Renal Pathology
(Renal)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
LANGUAGE: The
official language of the symposia is English.
PROCEEDINGS:
The Symposia proceedings will be published on a CD-ROM, copy of
which will be provided to all the contibutors.
AUDIENCE:
The conference is directed to all pathologists in academia,
industry, health services or private practice. Additionally, final
year medical, dental and veterinary students are also encouraged
to participate by submitting research projects where appropriate.
ENTRY SUBMISSION: In the first instance you are invited to
submit Title, Author(s), proposed category and if possible an
abstract of your manuscript by completing the on-line form @
http://pathit.com/symposia/request1.htm On receipt of your
request, you will be allocated a manuscript number which should be
used in all future correspondences relating to your paper. If you
do not submit an abstract in the first instance, on receipt of
your manuscript number you will be required to submit an abstract
of your manuscript by 1-May-96, for peer review by our
international panel.
Following the review, you will be
informed by 1-Jul-96 whether your manuscript has been accepted or
not.
MANUSCRIPT FORMAT:
All submissions to be in
electronic format as either as MS Word,Worperfect or HTML files.
All figures and images to be supplied in *;gif or *.jpg files.
Each manuscript should have: Title Page with Author(s) and
affiliation, Abstract, Introduction, Material and Methods, Results
and Discussion., Refrences. Manuscripts should be concise and
written in American or English styles.Sample copy, further details
and HTML templates will be supplied on acceptance of your
manuscript.
DEADLINES-DATE
Title and Abstract-
01-Mar-96
Manuscript Number Allocation-30-Mar-96
Receipt
of Abstract-01-May-96
Abstract Acceptance-01-Jul-96
Paper
Submission-1-Sep-96
SYMPOSIUM COMMITTEE
Symposium
Director: Dr Anil K Dhiri, DVM, MBA PathIT Pathology On-line;
Congress Office; London N20 8HL Telephone: +44 (0)973 312 997,
Telefax: +44 (0)181 343 8169 E-mail: pathit@pathit.com
REVIEW
PANEL
Dr Hank C. Chien, MD, PhD, Taiwan Dr. Andrew Lyon,
MD, Canada Mr Coos Visser, CT(IAC) LVF, Netherlands Dr Phillipe
Bertheau, MD, France Dr Warren G Lieullan, DVM, PhD, United
States
November 3-5, 1996 ITCH'96 - Information
Technology in Community Health; Victoria, BC, Canada,
http://sol.uvic.ca/heis/ITCH/ITCH.html
July
1-4, 1997 2nd International Conference of Animal Health
Information Specialists; Frederiksberg, Denmark From:
bommice@inet.uni-c.dk
(Bomholtgaard Breeding and Research Centre Ltd.)
Preliminary
Announcement and Call for Papers The Danish Veterinary and
Agricultural Library Royal Danish Veterinary and Agricultural
University; Frederiksberg, Denmark; July 1-4, 1997
The
conference programme will include invited and contributed papers
and field trips related to the conference theme.
Located at
the Royal Danish Veterinary and Agricultural University, the
conference will be close to the Danish Veterinary and Agricultural
Library. There will be separate registration for continuing
education courses, taking place at the Danish Veterinary and
Agricultural Library. After the official conference, it will be
possible to visit individual Scandinavian veterinary
libraries.
The official language of the conference is
English.
The conference is directed to librarians and other
information professionals working in:
Veterinary
medicine Laboratory animal science Zoological and wildlife
medicine and biology Primatology Zootechny Veterinary
pharmacology Food hygiene
Papers relating to all aspects
of animal health information management, present and future, are
solicited. Topics appropriate to the conference, but not limited
to the following, include:
International Resource Sharing,
Improvement of access to local information sites, projects,
Information research , Organisation of regional groups of
information workers across borders, Network communication,
Publishing development
Management and marketing of Library
specialities, Improvement of contact to university/company staff,
Consultative activities, Serving the public, Document delivery,
Advertising
User education and training, Evaluating needs
and demands, Technical tools, Teaching students as a part of
curriculum
Veterinary specialities: Patents, Biotechnology,
Pharmacology, Alternative medicine, Animal health promotion (for
the benefit of man), Zoonoses, Food/Feed science & technology,
Food hygiene, Laboratory animal science
Anna Eslau
Larsen Danish Veterinary and Agricultural Library Buelowsvej
13 DK-1870 Frederiksberg C. Telephone: +45 35 28 21 39,
Telefax: +45 35 28 2158 E-mail: ael@kvl.dk
Deadlines
Receipt
of abstract: September 1, 1996
Invitation to submit paper:
November 1, 1996
Internet WWW address for further
information: http://www.dvjb.kvl.dk/dvjba/icahis.htm
Yours
sincerely,
Frederik Dagnaes-Hansen, DVM, PhD. Bomholtgard
Breeding and Research Centre Ltd. Bomholtvej 10, P.O.Box 39,
DK-8680 RY, Denmark Tel.: +45 86841211 Fax +45 86841699 E-mail:
bommice@inet.uni-c.dk WWW:
http://inet.uni-c.dk/~bommice/ WWW:
http://www.uib.no/vivariet/Bomholt.html
Veterinary
Epidemiology/Information Management Postgraduate Position From:
iagardner@ucdavis.edu
(Ian Gardner)
Opportunity for Postgraduate Veterinary
Education
Position: Adjunct Instructor Department of
Medicine and Epidemiology School of Veterinary
Medicine University of California, Davis
SALARY RANGE:
$19,608 - $32,300 per year, dependent upon qualifications and/or
experience (indexed to NIH scale).
BENEFITS: Eligible for
student health insurance and payment of in-state tuition.
Out-of-state tuition not covered.
EFFECTIVE DATE:
Effective July 1, 1996 or as soon thereafter as possible. Term of
appointment is for one academic year. Possible reappointment up to
a maximum of four years, with expectation that extramural funding
will be sought by faculty mentor/appointee within first year of
study.
FILING DEADLINE: Applications will be accepted
through February 15, 1996 or until filled.
QUALIFICATIONS:
D.V.M. (or equivalent) degree and acceptance into appropriate UCD
graduate group (application may be concurrent). Minimum 3.5 GPA
required for appointment and must be maintained. Must demonstrate
high potential, promise and desire for an academic career in
teaching and research. Demonstrated teaching and research
experience or potential in area of epidemiology and information
management required. Preference will be given to U.S. citizens or
permanent residents.
RESPONSIBILITIES: Provide
instructional support in area of epidemiology and information
management and conduct research under the guidance of one of the
departmental faculty members whose research area is best suited to
the appropriate field of graduate study.
TO APPLY:
Applications must include transcripts of all college and
professional course work, three letters of reference, and a
narrative outlining future academic and professional goals.
Concurrent application for admission to UCD graduate program is
also suggested as successful admission is required for employment
in this position. Women and ethnic minorities are encouraged to
apply.
Send applications or direct inquiries to:
Dr.
Peter J. Ihrke, Acting Chair Department of Medicine and
Epidemiology School of Veterinary Medicine University of
California, Davis Davis, CA 956l6 PHONE: (916) 752-1363 FAX:
(916)752-0414
SUGGESTED READING
Author(s): C Mcnaught, K Whithear, G Browning Title: The
Role of Evaluation in Curriculum Design and Innovation - A
Case-Study of a Computer-Based Approach to Teaching Veterinary
Systematic Bacteriology and Mycology Source: Interactive
Multimedia in University Education: Designing for Change in
Teaching and Learning (Series: Ifip Transactions A - Computer
Science and Technology 59 (1994)) Page(s): 295-307
Author(s):
RC Macgregor, RS Cocks Title: Computer Usage and Satisfaction
in the Australian Veterinary Industry Source: Australian
Veterinary Practitioner 25: 1 (MAR 1995) Page(s):
43-48
Author(s): V Kouba Title: Epizoo - Software for
Veterinary Epidemiology Training and Problem-Solving Source:
Bulletin of the World Health Organization 73: 1 (1995) Page(s):
77-83
Author(s): KS Godwin, CL Mccully, DG Poplack, FM
Balis Title: An Animal Facility Database-Management System
Using a Macintosh Computer and Commercially Available
Software Source: Contemporary Topics in Laboratory Animal
Science 34: 2 (MAR 1995) Page(s): 54-56
Author(s): RH
Dwinger, E Cappella, E Perez, M Baaijen, E Muller Title:
Application of a Computerized Herd Management and Production
Control Program in Costa-Rica Source: Tropical Agriculture 71:
1 (JAN 1994) Page(s): 74-76
Author(s): BE Eilts, DL
Paccamonti Title: Using Bar Codes to Enter Data into the
Dairychamp(TM) Herd Health Computer-Program Source: Veterinary
Medicine: Suppl. (1995) Page(s): 2
Author(s): BJ
Doty Title: This Veterinarian Adores Her Computer Source:
Veterinary Economics 36: 5 (MAY 1995) Page(s): 44
Author(s):
D Dewhurst, L Jenkinson Title: The Impact of Computer-Based
Alternatives on the Use of Animals in Undergraduate Teaching - A
Pilot-Study Source: ATLA - Alternatives to Laboratory Animals
23: 4 (JUL-AUG 1995) Page(s): 521-530
Author(s): JD
Richardson, PJ Cripps, JG Lane Title: An Evaluation of the
Accuracy of Aging Horses by Their Dentition - Can a Computer-Model
Be Accurate Source: Veterinary Record 137: 6 (AUG 5
1995) Page(s): 139-140
CLOSING BITS
David Letterman's Top 10 Signs You've Gone To a Bad
Veterinarian http://netvet.wustl.edu/top10.htm
10)
When you hand him your cat, he asks uncomfortably, "Monkey?" 9)
Two weeks later, your dog coughs up a rubber glove. 8) Big sign
in waiting room: No Pets Allowed! 7) Diploma looks a lot like
menu from Chinese restaurant. 6) Always saying "I've got a
tick in my pants." 5) Sends you a card every spring: "Time
for your dog's annual neutering." 4) First question, "What
ails your varmint?" 3) He has a lot of posters up
advertising cockfights. 2) He himself wears one of those big
funnel shaped dog collars. 1) He bites!
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