SUBSCRIBE
SUBSCRIBE
EXPLORE +
  • About infoDOCKET
  • Academic Libraries on LJ
  • Research on LJ
  • News on LJ
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Libraries
    • Academic Libraries
    • Government Libraries
    • National Libraries
    • Public Libraries
  • Companies (Publishers/Vendors)
    • EBSCO
    • Elsevier
    • Ex Libris
    • Frontiers
    • Gale
    • PLOS
    • Scholastic
  • New Resources
    • Dashboards
    • Data Files
    • Digital Collections
    • Digital Preservation
    • Interactive Tools
    • Maps
    • Other
    • Podcasts
    • Productivity
  • New Research
    • Conference Presentations
    • Journal Articles
    • Lecture
    • New Issue
    • Reports
  • Topics
    • Archives & Special Collections
    • Associations & Organizations
    • Awards
    • Funding
    • Interviews
    • Jobs
    • Management & Leadership
    • News
    • Patrons & Users
    • Preservation
    • Profiles
    • Publishing
    • Roundup
    • Scholarly Communications
      • Open Access

January 7, 2017 by Gary Price

UMass Medical School Library Fellow Receives Funding to Study Use of Graphic Novels to Improve Medical Literacy

January 7, 2017 by Gary Price

From the UMass Medical School:

Matthew N. Noe, MSLS, a fellow in the Lamar Soutter Library, has received an Arnold P. Gold Foundation Research Institute literature review grant to investigate how graphic novels can be used to improve medical literacy.
“While visual images are not a new phenomenon in medicine, narrative comics, or ‘sequential art,’ have only recently emerged into the practice of medicine,” Noe said. “As this emerging field continues to be defined, a review of the current state of comics in medicine will provide future researchers with a clear vision of what works, what does not and what requires further evidence, as well as an opportunity to uncover new areas for consideration.”
Through the foundation’s Mapping the Landscape, Journeying Together initiative, which focuses on advancing the humanism in health care, Noe will lead a team from UMass Medical School, including Suzana Makowski, MD, associate professor of medicine, and Leonard L. Levin, MS, assistant professor of family medicine & community health, in a two-year effort to identify and catalog existing graphic medicine publications.
The group will determine how the literature is employed in health care settings—educational, clinical and consumer—and what effects, if any, the practices have on the physician and patient and their collective experiences and health outcomes. The project is the first to evaluate the scope of comic use in health care.
“There are many possible avenues for the arts and comics in medicine; however, people have to give it a chance,” Noe said. “Many people are still looking at comics as something childish. I want to encourage people to remove prior judgements about comics and give them a shot. I want to help people remember the positive association they had with comics in childhood. Those positive associations can be translated to medicine; if you can use graphic medicine to tell stories people might be more willing to listen and learn.

Direct to Matthew Noe’s “The Graphic Librarian” Blog
Direct to Matthew Noe’s ORCID Page

Filed under: Associations and Organizations, Funding, Libraries, News, School Libraries

SHARE:

About Gary Price

Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.

ADVERTISEMENT

Archives

Job Zone

ADVERTISEMENT

Related Infodocket Posts

ADVERTISEMENT

FOLLOW US ON X

Tweets by infoDOCKET

ADVERTISEMENT

This coverage is free for all visitors. Your support makes this possible.

This coverage is free for all visitors. Your support makes this possible.

Primary Sidebar

  • News
  • Reviews+
  • Technology
  • Programs+
  • Design
  • Leadership
  • People
  • COVID-19
  • Advocacy
  • Opinion
  • INFOdocket
  • Job Zone

Reviews+

  • Booklists
  • Prepub Alert
  • Book Pulse
  • Media
  • Readers' Advisory
  • Self-Published Books
  • Review Submissions
  • Review for LJ

Awards

  • Library of the Year
  • Librarian of the Year
  • Movers & Shakers 2022
  • Paralibrarian of the Year
  • Best Small Library
  • Marketer of the Year
  • All Awards Guidelines
  • Community Impact Prize

Resources

  • LJ Index/Star Libraries
  • Research
  • White Papers / Case Studies

Events & PD

  • Online Courses
  • In-Person Events
  • Virtual Events
  • Webcasts
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Media Inquiries
  • Newsletter Sign Up
  • Submit Features/News
  • Data Privacy
  • Terms of Use
  • Terms of Sale
  • FAQs
  • Careers at MSI


© 2026 Library Journal. All rights reserved.


© 2022 Library Journal. All rights reserved.