Penny Buttenshaw is the chief physiotherapist at Queen Mary's Hospital,
Roehampton. I know her as we provide library services for QMH.
Was it a report?
There was a book called Physiotherapy the Roehampton Way by Barbara Engstrom
and Catherine Van de Ven who used to work at QMH
But this was superceded by:
Therapy for amputees, edited by Barbara Engstrom, Catherine Van de Ven
3rd ed Edinburgh Churchill Livingstone 1999
Regards
Helen
-----Original Message-----
From: Evidence based practice to librarianship and information science
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of vdickson
Sent: 24 May 2004 07:02
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject:
Hi,
We would like to purchase the following resource and are not sure who to
contact for it as we received no reply from the National Health Service:
Roehampton approach to lower limb amputee rehabilitation: An overview /
Penny Buttenshaw. (1994).
Is anyone able to provide us with contact details for a vendor for this
resource?
Regards,
Virginia Dickson
College of Health Liaison Librarian
The University of Notre Dame Australia
PO Box 1225 (19 Mouat Street)
Fremantle WA 6160
Phone: +61 8 9433 0709
Fax: +61 8 9433 0544
-----Original Message-----
From: Evidence based practice to librarianship and information science
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Scott
Nicholson
Sent: Thursday, 18 March 2004 2:58 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Statistics in the library literature and critical appraisal
The book that came to my mind for stats and research methods for
libraries is:
Busha, C. and Harter, S. (1980). Research Methods in Librarianship:
Techniques and Interpretation. New York: Academic Press. ISBN
0-12-147550-6.
Since these methods don't go out of date quickly, the text is still
useful and valid... until you get to chapter 13- The Computer and
Calculator as Aids to Research, where you can learn how to use memory
functions in calculators and punchcards for SPSS programs. The normal
distribution, however, has not changed in 23 years.
You can get it used for about $6 over at half.com.
(Tinyurl for half.com page = http://tinyurl.com/274m3 )
p.s. Side note - if you don't know about TinyURL, it's very handy. You
give it a long ungainly URL, and it encodes it into a tiny url for you,
which is great for including in e-mails.
Scott Nicholson
Assistant Professor, Syracuse University School of Information Studies
http://bibliomining.org
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