Nov
13
Posted by liaison on November 13th, 2025
Posted in: Funding
This is a guest post written by David Hansen, Manager of Administrative Operations at the University of Mexico’s Health Sciences Library and Informatics Center (HSLIC). David received NNLM Region 4 professional development funds to attend the Designing Libraries XII conference at the University of Rochester’s River Campus Libraries.
New Mexico is facing a stark reality: an aging health‑care workforce and a rising demand for care across urban and rural communities. As outlined in the UNM Health Science Center’s 10-year strategic plan, the next decade must confront both capacity and pipeline – expanding where and how we teach while modernizing the places where learning happens.
The UNM Hospital’s Critical Care Tower opening this month marks the first visible step in a multi‑stage response. Next comes a new School of Medicine building – with a timeline that targets coming online in roughly five years – followed by coordinated improvements that strengthen interprofessional education and clinical training across the Health Sciences campus. Recent investments are already moving the needle: the College of Nursing opened a new building that enabled significant growth in nursing programs, and the College of Pharmacy is engaged in a comprehensive renovation that positions them for near‑term expansion and success.
Against this backdrop, the HSC plans to double enrollment and scale clinical and academic programs over the next decade. The question for the Health Sciences Library & Informatics Center (HSLIC) was clear: How will the library scale without sacrificing the standards of excellence our users count on? To explore answers, we recently attended the Designing Libraries for the 21st Century conference at the University of Rochester. Our charge was to study how peer institutions are reinventing libraries as high‑connectivity hubs and to bring home approaches that fit the realities of health sciences education and care in New Mexico.
Walking through Rochester’s library spaces felt like stepping into a series of working hypotheses about the future of libraries:
It wasn’t the specific furniture or brands that impressed us; it was the design logic – spaces built to welcome different kinds of minds, bodies, and workflows, and a culture that treats iteration as a virtue.
On the flight home, we compared notes and kept landing on the same conclusion: HSLIC already holds many of the assets of a future‑forward library. We have quiet, wellbeing‑aligned options (nap pods, a lactation room, a wellness room) and treadmills with adjustable desks so learners can work while they walk. Several neurodivergent students have reported that the bi‑pedal stimulation helps them sustain focus and retain information. We offer varied study settings – individual and group rooms, carrels, pod chairs, and a reservable classroom – so patrons can choose sanctuary or collaboration as needed.
We also provide applied learning technologies that move beyond novelty. Our 3D printing service turns complex concepts into tactile learning: recently, a neuro‑PT faculty member had us print spinal cross‑sections, then asked students to lace the models to map nerve plexuses. The result was embodied understanding, not just a clever object. Our Data Visualization Wall is already enabling visual exploration and storytelling. We see strong potential across HSC – as examples, biochemistry pathway presentations in the College of Pharmacy and population modeling in the College of Population Health – along with countless yet‑to‑be‑named use cases as adoption grows.
The key takeaway from Rochester, and in our reflection afterward, was Human‑Centered Design (HCD): starting with empathy, recognizing the desire paths that users are already creating, and then iterating toward solutions. In practice, this means we will:
HCD resonates with HSLIC’s Justice, Equity, and Inclusion commitments: accessibility and cultural affirmation aren’t add‑ons; they are design constraints that make the whole system better.
The Changing Nature of Libraries – And Where HSLIC Fits
Libraries of the past were quiet repositories. Librarians were guides through stacks of information. Libraries of the future, especially in the health sciences, are systems of support: hubs and nodes where knowledge is actively surfaced, where novices find guided on‑ramps into credible sources, where clinicians and researchers can move quickly from question to insight.
At HSLIC, we’re shaping that system around three complementary modalities of use:
As we synthesize what we heard from learners and instructors across disciplines, HSLIC is using a set of How Might We… statements to focus design and investment decisions. A few examples:
These aren’t slogans; they are working prompts that help us evaluate options, pick standards, and say yes to what matters.
HSLIC’s services already meet a wide range of needs: Ask‑a‑Librarian, expert literature searches, resource sharing through Interlibrary Loan and Document Delivery, orientations to key databases, and guidance for using our learning technologies. As HSC grows, we will expand what we do best:
By November, all current vacancies will be filled across the Public Services, RECIS (Research & Education Clinical Information Services), Administration and RAD (Resources, Archives & Discovery) divisions. A fully staffed team enables us to:
As HSC enrollments and programs scale, proposals for additional staffing will be data‑driven and brought through HSC leadership channels at the appropriate time. For now, our focus is on maximizing impact with the structure we have.
We are committing to measures that matter and respect privacy:
If you teach, learn, research, or provide care at UNM, we invite you to help shape the next decade of HSLIC.
Tell us:
HSLIC is ready to be at the center of the desire paths for all patrons – where people and knowledge meet. Calm enough for deep thinking. Powerful enough for collaboration. Open enough for innovation that improves health for all New Mexicans.