INNOVATIV
Band 79: Janet Wagner Band 78: Philip Franklin Orr Band 77: Carina Dony Band 76:
Linda Freyberg
Sabine Wolf (Hrsg.)
Band 75: Denise Rudolph Band 74: Sophia Paplowski Band 73: Carmen Krause Band 72:
Katrin Toetzke
Dirk Wissen
Band 71: Rahel Zoller Band 70: Sabrina Lorenz Band 69: Jennifer Hale Band 68:
Linda Schünhoff
Benjamin Flämig
Band 67:
Wilfried Sühl-Strohmenger
Jan-Pieter Barbian
Band 66: Tina Schurig Band 65: Christine Niehoff Band 64: Eva May Band 63: Eva Bunge Band 62: Nathalie Hild Band 61: Martina Haller Band 60: Leonie Flachsmann Band 59: Susanne Göttker Band 58: Georg Ruppelt Band 57: Karin Holste-Flinspach Band 56: Rafael Ball Band 55: Bettina Schröder Band 54: Florian Hagen Band 53: Anthea Zöller Band 52: Ursula Georgy Band 51: Ursula Jaksch Band 50: Hermann Rösch (Hrsg) Band 49: Lisa Maria Geisler Band 48: Raphaela Schneider Band 47: Eike Kleiner
Bestellen Sie jetzt online!
18. Januar 2026
  WEITERE NEWS
Aktuelles aus
L
ibrary
Essentials

In der Ausgabe 9/2025 (Dezember 2025) lesen Sie u.a.:

  • Rethinking Science in the Age of AI: Wie Künstliche Intelligenz die wissenschaftliche Praxis verändert
  • Warum Antworten und Wissen nicht das Gleiche sind: Wenn KI das Lernen verändert
  • Fachwissen zwischen Vergangenheit
    und Zukunft: Wie Archivar:innen digitale Kulturerbe-Archive neu denken
  • Cambridge-Report fordert neue Ansätze für ein nachhaltiges Open-Research-Ökosystem
  • Wie Verlage und Plattformen
    mit KI gegen Paper Mills vorgehen
  • Bibliotheken retten Leben
  • Aufmerksamkeit von Kindern
    im Zusammenhang mit Mediennutzung
  • Daten oder Untergang: Elsevier-Chef Y.S. Chi über die Zukunft des Publizierens
  • Bibliotheken öffnen ihre Archive
    für das KI-Zeitalter
  • Wenn wir Bücher entwerten,
    entwerten wir die Zukunft
u.v.m.
  fachbuchjournal

Coronavirus Research Database Gives ProQuest Users No-Cost Access
to Essential Coverage of COVID-19 and More

Cross-disciplinary resource enables researchers to search and discover full-text articles,
dissertations and other content from key publishers in one place

In response to the rapidly growing need for authoritative content related to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), ProQuest is launching a new Coronavirus Research Database, giving all ProQuest users no-cost access to full-text content covering all facets of COVID-19 and related infectious diseases.

The Coronavirus Research Database saves time and improves outcomes for researchers by aggregating authoritative content from ProQuest with content made available at no cost by members of the International Association of STM Publishers – including Springer Nature, Taylor & Francis and The BMJ. Journals, preprints, conference proceedings and dissertations provide comprehensive coverage of COVID-19 and other past coronavirus outbreaks, such as MERS and SARS, for context around the current global pandemic. Full-text content in the database is available either directly from ProQuest or via links to publisher sites.

“Opening up access to materials related to COVID-19 will not only help clinicians, students and academics, but is also crucial for nurses – one of the many groups who are under siege right now,” said Dr. Daphne Stannard, a lecturer at the San Francisco State University School of Nursing. “I’m pleased to see ProQuest make this content available to the people who need it.”

“Whether it’s the latest medical research on how the virus is transmitted, preprints exploring new therapies to combat the virus, or editorials exploring lessons learned from prior outbreaks, faculty and students need quick and easy access to information to help them navigate this new world,” said Chris Burghardt, Vice President of Product Management at ProQuest. “The Coronavirus Research Database was created as a tool to help our users to find the information they need to quickly explore the many facets of this disease.”

The database is automatically enabled at no cost for all ProQuest platform customers, and can be accessed at search.proquest.com/coronavirus. Content will continue to evolve as new research and information emerges.

More information on how to access the database is available in http://this brief Q&A document' target='_blank'>this brief Q&A document.

The launch of the Coronavirus Research Database is the latest in a series of programs ProQuest is building to help libraries support the crucial research needed now to fight this disease as well as support distance learning for their patrons. Other programs are detailed http://on the ProQuest website' target='_blank'>on the ProQuest website.

www.proquest.com