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The notice below came from the www.nih.gov/news web page:

NIH Office of Dietary Supplements Announces New Database of
Scientific Literature on Dietary Supplements

The Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS) at the National Institutes
of Health will announce the launch of its new International
Bibliographic Information on Dietary Supplements (IBIDS) database at
a news media event on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 1999, from 1 p.m. to 2:30
p.m. at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. IBIDS is a
database of published, international, scientific literature on
dietary supplements that is available to the public free of charge
through the ODS Internet home page
(http://dietary-supplements.info.nih.gov). The purpose of this
database is to assist both scientists and the general public in
locating credible, scientific literature on dietary supplements. The
computer interface was designed to be user-friendly so individuals
with all levels of expertise may use it easily. For those unfamiliar
with dietary supplement terminology, a drop-down list of standard
keywords is available. "This database is one of the specific
mandates for the Office of Dietary Supplements designated in the
original Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 that
created the office," said Dr. Bernadette M. Marriott, Director of
the ODS. "We have viewed its development as a key effort of the
office that will be useful to the scientific community and to the
public for identifying scientific information on dietary
supplements." Keeping with their commitment to work together with
other agencies, the ODS staff initiated an interagency cooperative
agreement with the Food and Nutrition Information Center (FNIC),
National Agricultural Library (NAL), Agricultural Research Service,
U.S. Department of Agriculture to develop and maintain the IBIDS
database. NAL has extensive prior experience in developing research
databases. IBIDS is driven by a sophisticated search strategy that
simultaneously and transparently searches numerous existing medical,
botanical, agricultural, chemical and pharmaceutical databases. This
presented a technical challenge because each of the existing
databases uses a different format and set of key words. The media
event will include remarks by NIH and NAL officials and a
demonstration of the database. Questions from the news media are
welcome.