For a complete listing of medical databases available to UW-Whitewater students and faculty, visit the Medicine Databases A-Z page.
Full-text articles from 180+ journals and reports, covering complementary, holistic, and integrated approaches to health care and wellness.
Full text for 200+ health reference books, reports, pamphlets and leaflets; 570+ consumer health related periodicals, and physician-generated videos.
Information on many health topics including the medical sciences, nutrition, childcare, sports medicine, and general health. Full text for 160 journals.
Full text access to nearly 520 scholarly full text journals and citations for another 500, focusing on many medical disciplines.
Full text nursing and related health discipline journals, plus legal cases, clinical innovations, drug records, and clinical trials.
Citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, biology, life science journals, and online books.
For articles in magazines, journals, and newspapers, use the Library’s article databases. Below is a list of some suggested databases to try for research in this course.
Visit the complete listing of all UW-Whitewater Databases by Subject - Education and also Kinesiology & Sports.
The world's largest source of education information. More than 950,000 abstracts of documents and journal articles on education research and practice, some linking out to full text.
Citations and abstracts of journal articles, book chapters, and books in psychology and related disciplines.
Offering full text of journals, books, videos, and education-related conference papers, as well as millions of citations. Coverage spans all levels of education from early childhood to higher education and includes specialties such as multilingual education, health education and testing.
Selected full text for over 1,520 regional U.S. newspapers, international newspapers, newswires, and television and radio news transcripts.
To access the full text of an article, tap , View Online, or
; or tap
to determine whether UW-W Library patrons have access to it via a different database or Interlibrary Loan. Here's how:
How to Use Find It: Step by Step
Use the Journals search to find out whether we have access to a particular journal or magazine:
If you know the DOI