Calling All MSK Staff and Interested Blog Readers

The MSK Public Affairs Department is excited to share that Memorial Sloan-Kettering’s redesigned website has been nominated for the 16th Annual Webby Awards in the Health category!

The MSK website is also eligible for The Webby Awards’ “People’s Voice Award,” which fans across the globe can vote for online. Please take a moment to show your support and that you find the new website’s layout appealing and informative.

Vote Now ! (Please note that you will need to sign in to vote. You can easily sign up for an account or sign in through your Google, Twitter, or Facebook account.)

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Blog Buzz: April 1 – April 13

With an Ebook price fixing lawsuit, an open access policy from the World Bank and guidelines from UNESCO, and the bird flu security recommendation reversal (with a catch), it’s been an eventful couple of weeks in blog land.

There was a reversal from the biosecurity panel on publishing the previously blocked bird flu papers (Washington Post), but the publication of one paper is now blocked by export control laws (NPR’s Shots).  In a related but not new item, Ed Yong explains the 2009 vaccine’s relation to the 1918 flu epidemic.

The US is suing publishers for Ebook price fixing (Bloomberg). Here is an interesting item from Forbes about why Apple’s fancy footwork upset the Feds.

Nature precedings is closing up shop. Meanwhile, in other Nature news, the NPG has announced a linked data platform.

Open access’ momentum is clear in the news of lateThe World Bank announced an open access policy and launched a repository using Creative Commons licensing, and UNESCO released a set of guidelines for the “development and promotion” of open access to scientific information.

There were changes to testing recommendations for low-risk patients from a number of medical groups last week.  Christine Cassel and James Guest provide an explanation and commentary in JAMA and the NY Times covered the topic as well.

And here is some belated library-related April Fools fun from The Daily Crimson and Google (scroll down in the coverage from SearchEngineLand to the “Really Advanced Search”).

Got Funding?

Are you currently looking for sources of funding for your research? The Department of Defense Lung Cancer Research Program recently announced that it will have $10.2M in 2012 “to support innovative, high-impact lung cancer research”. Application deadlines and instructions will be available this month on Grants.gov.

And for those already in the midst of a funded project with the need for an information specialist to help with the storage, organization, management and use of electronic research data, you’re in luck! The Department of Health and Human Services just announced an Administrative Supplement to NIH parent award recipients. Applications are due by June 5, 2012.