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Journal Article

Citation

Hogan T, Martinez R, Evans C, Saban KL, Proescher E, Steiner M, Smith B. Health Info. Libr. J. 2018; 35(1): 38-49.

Affiliation

Department of Pediatrics, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Health Libraries Group, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/hir.12203

PMID

29230943

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The polytraumatic nature of traumatic brain injury (TBI) makes diagnosis and treatment difficult.

OBJECTIVES: To (1) characterise information needs among Veterans Health Administration (VHA) polytrauma care team members engaged in the diagnosis and treatment of TBI; (2) identify sources used for TBI related information; and (3) identify barriers to accessing TBI related information.

METHODS: Cross-sectional online survey of 236 VHA polytrauma care team members.

RESULTS: Most respondents (95.8%) keep at least somewhat current regarding TBI, but 31.5% need more knowledge on diagnosing TBI and 51.3% need more knowledge on treating TBI. Respondents use VHA affiliated sources for information, including local colleagues (81.7%), VHA offsite conferences/meetings (78.3%) and onsite VHA educational offerings (73.6%); however, limited time due to administrative responsibilities (50.9%), limited financial resources (50.4%) and patient care (50.4%) were prominent barriers.

DISCUSSION: Medical librarians are in a unique position to develop information services, resources and other electronic tools that reflect the clinical context in which polytrauma care team members practice, and the different tasks they perform.

CONCLUSION: Polytrauma care team members could benefit from additional information regarding the diagnosis and treatment of TBI. Addressing their information needs and supporting their information seeking requires a mulit-pronged approach to time and financial constraints.

Published 2017. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.


Language: en

Keywords

information management; information seeking behaviour; libraries; medical; surveys

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