The SALT mass casualty triage system can be applied quickly in the field and appears to be safe, as measured by a low undertriage rate. There was, however, significant overtriage. Further refinement is needed, and effect on patient outcomes needs to be evaluated.
The chemical algorithm of the proposed CBRN-capable mass casualty triage system can be applied rapidly by trained paramedics, but a significant under-triage rate (10.7%) was seen in this pilot test. Further refinement and testing are needed, and effect on outcome must be studied.
Teaching Mendeley achieves the impossibleit gets users excited to learn about organizing and citing their research articles. However, introducing Mendeley to students and faculty goes well beyond assisting them with organizing their references. Students are particularly apt to see the benefits that its social networking features offer, including promoting collaboration, identifying key resources, and facilitating group work. There are benefits for librarians too-the information it provides on the use of articles can contribute to collection development or research into patterns of information as well as promoting librarian expertise. As a free citation manager, Mendeley consists of two parts, a web interface that handles inputlocating, gathering and tagging of citations and PDF's, and a desktop client that handles output through its integration with word processing tools. Mendeley users appreciate that it is compatible with almost all web browsers, and operating systems-there's even an "App" for it. Mendeley allows users to import citations and documents from a built in search engine, from most databases, including Google Scholar, or from other citation managers such as RefWorks and EndNote, to create in-text citations and bibliographies using virtually any style guide. What really makes Mendeley stand out is the social networking it facilitates. Users can choose to open their collection of resources to the world or just to particular groups. It is also a powerful discovery tool, leading users to key resources, potential collaborators, and connections in their fields. Tracing the other people who have included a particular article in their collections, and seeing what else they've tagged leverages the knowledge of experts and colleagues in new ways. The use of Mendeley can easily be included in workshops for faculty and information literacy sessions for students at all levels. Mendeley is free, user-friendly and effective; users are quick to see the benefits of time-saving, collaboration, and discovery Mendeley provides, extending the librarian's role from bibliographic instruction into finding resources in new ways, and organizing found information.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.