Databases

5 databases found starting with G X Health SciencesX

Coverage: 1980 to the present

Covers worldwide literature on physical and human geography, geology, ecology and related disciplines. Contains references to over 1.1 million journal articles, books, conference proceedings, reports, etc. from over 2,065 journals and other sources. Includes abstracts.Subject areas covered include: cartography, climatology, energy, environment, geochemistry, geomorphology, geophysics, hydrology, meteorology, paleontology, petrology, photogrammetry, sedimentology, and volcanology.

Coverage: 1785 to the present

Covers worldwide literature in geology and earth sciences. Contains references to over 2.3 million journal articles, books, maps, conference papers, reports, and theses from over 25,150 sources. Includes abstracts. Subject areas covered include: crystallography, economic geology, environmental geology, engineering geology, geochemistry, geophysics, hydrogeology, hydrology, marine geology, mineralogy, oceanography, and paleontology.

Coverage: 1348 to the present

An evidence-based clinical decision support tool focused on infectious diseases, microbiology, and epidemiology. It provides diagnostic support, treatment guidance, and epidemiological tracking for over 370 infectious diseases across 230+ countries and territories. Tracked outbreaks since 1348, features 28K+ outbreaks, 39K+ graphs, 100K+ surveys and tools for 2K+ pathogens, 360+ diseases, and 30K+ drug/vaccine names. Updated daily by expert scientists.

Coverage: 1910 to the present

The only specialist database dedicated to public health, completing the picture of international medical and health research by capturing key literature not readily covered by other databases. Includes journal articles, book chapters, research reports, conference papers, multimedia (e.g., image, audio, video) and more.

New
Coverage: 1800 to 1970

This primary source database brings together material from The National Archives, UK and the British Film Institute to document the changes in reactions, responses, medicines, and treatments of infectious diseases within the British empire and across the globe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Thematic areas include animals and livestock, disease prevention and interventions, institutional care, maternal and child health, and more, with a range of document types allowing researchers to explore this area of STEM history and colonial administration.