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Region 5 Blog November 17th, 2024
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Hospital Librarian, Brynn Beals

Posted by on October 9th, 2024 Posted in: Guest Post, News from Network Members
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October is National Medical Librarians Month. Region 5 is celebrating by highlighting some of the wonderful medical librarians in our region. This guest post is from one of our colleagues in Washington state.

Greetings from Tacoma, WA where I have been a hospital librarian at St. Joseph Medical Center (part of Virginia Mason Franciscan Health/CommonSpirit Health) for (gulp!) 35 years. Time flies when you’re having fun. After college I worked as an accounting secretary in the tech manufacturing field where I was also the accounting “librarian”, which meant I was responsible for updating all the binders of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. Not having a love of numbers, I explored other options and landed in library school at UW. Medical librarianship was a natural fit having grown up in a family in health care, so I took the one health sciences librarianship class offered. After graduation I worked very briefly at what was once called St. Joseph Community Hospital library in Vancouver, WA before moving to Tacoma. While I have had the same job title for my entire tenure, the environment has changed dramatically. I began serving one hospital, which eventually has grown to 7, and on Day 1 I had never heard of the internet.

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Brynn in her hospital library

I have moved the library twice, most recently last year into a much smaller space so library services are now almost all virtual but I am on site every day (even through Covid). It’s efficient in our screen-based information world, but I rather miss the more frequent face-to-face contact with the wider hospital community. I enjoy the variety of being a solo but am also delighted to have joined forces with Mary Beth McAteer at Virginia Mason after our merger. With literally something new to learn every day I am never bored! Most recently, I am getting more involved with our expanding residency programs and working more collaboratively with the librarians in our national organization (CommonSpirit Health).

There has been a lot of learning along the way. Somehow we have transitioned from a card catalog to a discovery system, from print books & journals to ebooks and journals, and from Microsoft Office to Google.

I’ve seen a lot of change over the years but some things remain the same. One of the best parts of being a hospital librarian is when “that” article you provided really makes a positive difference in someone’s care. Much of the time we don’t know what happens to the information we relay but it’s a good day when a provider says “thanks — a Google search was not getting what I needed”. The other thing that has remained constant is the support of the medical librarian community. Especially as a solo, this is a vital resource. I can’t count the number of times you all have made me look good, so thank you all, and Happy Medical Librarians’ Month!

Image of the author ABOUT Carolyn Martin
Carolyn Martin is the Outreach and Education Coordinator for the NNLM Region 5. She works with various libraries and community organizations to increase health literacy in their communities.

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Developed resources reported in this program are supported by the National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health (NIH) under cooperative agreement number UG4LM012343 with the University of Washington.

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