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Learn more about who we are, what we do, our leaders, staff, planning, membership, and history.
Connect with the expert colleagues and innovative skills you need to advance your career.
MLA’s communities work on association initiatives and provide support, knowledge-sharing, and communication for health information professionals.
The health information profession provides access to and delivers accurate, relevant,and targeted information that improves patient care and supports education, research, and scholarly communication.
MLA members share their expertise with the public, other health information professionals, and members through a variety of resources, from recommended websites for patients and caregivers to the open access peer-reviewed Journal of the Medical Library Association.
MLA annual conferences further the association’s mission to support the profession. Each year MLA members and others gather for professional development, networking, presentations, exhibits, and much more.
MLA offers professional continuing education courses and other career development programs for practicing health sciences librarians, recent graduates, nurses, and others.
Systematic reviews present unique citation management challenges. Andy Hickner and Kathryn Vanderboll, veterans of many systematic reviews, will show you how to select the right software for your review and successfully address the challenges.
Learn how to identify the components of a clean and tidy dataset and describe the steps needed to process and normalize a "dirty" dataset.
If you work with your own data or advise researchers on theirs, you’ll want to get started right.
Everyone is talking about AI and what it can do, can’t do, and seems to do. Learn how to have conversations with research teams about the capabilities of current AI tools and the risks they present for systematic review rigor and reproducibility.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are among the most important study types used to answer clinical and systematic review questions. But not all RCT studies are good enough to share with clinicians or include in reviews. This webinar will give you tools to evaluate the quality of RCT studies.