Occupational Therapy Week

This week is Occupational Therapy Week, an annual week to raise awareness of Occupational Therapy. The library has many resources for Tooting Campus students studying on the Occupational Therapy course, some of which are listed below. Recommended research databases for Occupational Therapy: Cinahl – Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature. Primarily concerned with…Continue Reading Occupational Therapy Week

Patient Experiences “In Our Words” – St George’s Library book display

Did you know that November has many health and well-being campaigns, from International Stress Awareness Week , Diabetes Awareness Month, ‘Movember’, Carers Rights Day and the start of Disability History Month? “In Our Words” At St George’s Library we’ve chosen to curate a collection of books that centre on the patient experience, highlighting titles that…Continue Reading Patient Experiences “In Our Words” – St George’s Library book display

Black Futures Month at the Business Library

Written in collaboration with Felicity Crentsil, Andrew Medder, Felicia Thomas, and Lizzie Valuks. Our final post of the Month spotlights resources at the Business Library. The team have curated a display celebrating a range of historic and contemporary Black voices on this year’s theme, “Standing Firm in Power and Pride”. You can browse and borrow…Continue Reading Black Futures Month at the Business Library

Recommended resources for your courses

Screenshot of The Economist homepage.

We’ve asked our Subject Librarian Team for their top resource recommendations for the new term. All of these are accessible via the links provided, as long as you’re logging-in with your usual details:…Continue Reading Recommended resources for your courses

International Open Access Week 2025: Supporting open access publishing at City St George’s

Photograph of a laptop, notebook and pen, and coffee cup. Photo by Nick Morrison on Unsplash

The theme this year of “Who Owns Our Knowledge?”  challenges us “to reflect on not only who has access to education and research but on how knowledge is created and shared”. Choosing to publish open access (OA) means you can reassert control over your work and how it’s shared and reused. There are a few…Continue Reading International Open Access Week 2025: Supporting open access publishing at City St George’s