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03/31/2023
profile-icon Kimberley Barker
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This post was written by Kimberley R. Barker, Librarian for Belonging & Community Engagement. The above graphic was created by HRC.


You may be wondering why members of the Transgender community need a day of visibility and our colleague, Samantha Strong, who is the DEI Program Coordinator and Community Specialist at UPG, provides some reasons in the beautiful graphic that you'll find below, especially ones related to healthcare. There's one more that I, as the Health Sciences Library's Librarian for Belonging & Community Engagement want to share, and it's that at least 32 Transgender people were murdered last year.


This human rights issue, like all human rights issues, will never improve as long as it's left in the dark; for things (anything) to get better, it must be brought into the light and addressed- hence the Transgender Day of Visibility. Transgender people exist all over the world. Transgender people are our students and colleagues here at the University of Virginia, and transgender patients come to UVA Health for gender-affirming care and gender health services. I encourage you to learn more about this important work by watching this video which features UVA Health's Dr. J.T. Stranix and Dr. Sean Corbett, or to learn about resources in my Healthcare and the LGBTQIA+ Community guide.

It can be difficult to understand something so outside of our own experience; if we're happy with the gender we were assigned at birth and believe that it matches who we really are, the idea of being transgender (and altering one's body- though not all Transgender people choose to pursue that), may cause feelings of fear, anger, and disgust- which is strange when you think about it, because why do we have such a strong reaction to what other people decide to do with their own bodies? Nevertheless some people do, as the (at least) 32 Transgender people who were senselessly murdered in 2022 demonstrates. 


If you have a few minutes, I encourage you to read this March 23, 2023 article from The Washington Post: 'I've always known I was different: Four Trans People Share Their Stories', as well as watch one closer to home for those of us here in Virginia: "Becoming the Man I Want to Be: Charley's Gender-Confirmation Surgery", which details a UVA Health patient's journey towards gender-affirming healthcare and gender-confirmation surgery. 


To our Transgender community members, we see you and we at UVA Health are here to support you. Let us know how we can help.

 

Many thanks to Samantha Strong for allowing me to share her graphic.

03/14/2023
profile-icon Kimberley Barker
No Subjects

This Thursday, March 16th, at 4:00 PM, the UVA JEDI Reading Group will be visiting the Holsinger Studio Collection (more about the collection here). 
Please join us if you can! We will gather just outside of the 
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library at 4 PM to start our self-guided tour. If you can't join us for the tour and won't be able to visit the exhibit in person, you may also view the portraits online

If you have questions or need any accommodations to participate, please reach out to Megan Sayyad at mrs7yz@virginia.edu

-The UVA Postdoc Association Diversity & Community Outreach Committee's JEDI Reading Group in partnership with the UVA Health Sciences Library 

03/09/2023
profile-icon Kimberley Barker
No Subjects

WHAT IS IT?
Public Health Sciences @ the Library is a free service staffed by UVA School of Medicine Public Health Sciences statisticians that addresses introductory statistics and research methods questions.

 

HOW DID IT BEGIN?
PHS@the Library began several years ago as an in-person service, operating out of the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library. The pandemic changed that, with consultations occurring only online for the past three years. However, we're happy to announce that PHS@the Library is back in-house!


WHAT ARE THE DETAILS?
Beginning March 14, PHS@the Library will offer walk-up consultations in the Health Sciences Library. Knowing that some may prefer or require an online consultation, the service is also offering a Zoom Room option. Finally, for those who are unable to make the available time slots, PHS@the Library offers appointments upon request by contacting Mark Smolkin, PHS Senior Biostatistician at mes6r@virginia.edu.

PHS@the Library is available to students (medical, nursing, BIMS), clinical staff (residents, nurses, clinicians), research staff, and iTHRIV partners.
 

HOW DO I ACCESS THIS SERVICE?
Consult the schedule below to plan your visit:

Monday 2:00 PM-4:00 PM PHS@the Library zoom room https://virginia.zoom.us/j/94295365649?pwd=QnMrS3JaVGZadlhtZVd1R3NzbkR3UT09

Tuesday 2:00 PM-4:00 PM: In-person at HSL (first floor)

Wednesday 2:00 PM-4:00 PM In-person at HSL (first floor)

Thursday 2:00 PM-4:00 PM In-person at HSL (first floor)

Friday 2:00 PM-4:00 PM PHS@the Library zoom room https://virginia.zoom.us/j/94295365649?pwd=QnMrS3JaVGZadlhtZVd1R3NzbkR3UT09


We are happy to see PHS@the Library back in the Library, and are grateful for their partnership in providing support to the UVA Health research community.

03/06/2023
profile-icon Kimberley Barker
No Subjects

Aftershock: Screening and Panel Discussion

The Health Sciences Library; School of Medicine's Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion; and UVA Physicians Group will host a screening of Aftershock, a documentary on Black maternal mortality and the Birth Justice Movement.

The screening, which will take place on March 22nd, will be followed one week later (March 29th) by a panel discussion featuring members of the UVA Health and Charlottesville communities who are working to improve outcomes for BIPOC mothers and their families. Both events will take place both in-person at the Claude Moore Medical Education Building Learning Studio and online, and both will begin at 6:00 PM, with dinner served at 5:30 PM.

The deadline to register for either or both event(s) is Monday, March 13.  

Field is required.