• Title of article

    Bringing evidence to practice: a team approach to teaching skills required for an informationist role in evidence-based clinical and public health practice*†

  • Author/Authors

    Kathleen Burr Oliver، نويسنده , , Prudence Dalrymple، نويسنده , , Harold P. Lehmann، نويسنده , , Deborah Ann McClellan، نويسنده , , Karen A. Robinson، نويسنده , , Claire Twose، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    50
  • To page
    57
  • Abstract
    Objective: The objectives were (1) to develop an academic, graduate-level course designed for information professionals seeking to bring evidence to clinical medicine and public health practice and to address, in the course approach, the ʹʹreal-worldʹʹ time constraints of these domains and (2) to further specify and realize identified elements of the ʹʹinformationistʹʹ concept. Setting: The course took place at the Division of Health Sciences Informatics, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University. Participants: A multidisciplinary faculty, selected for their expertise in the course core competencies, and three students, two post-graduate National Library of Medicine (NLM) informationist fellows and one NLM second-year associate, participated in the research. Intervention: A 1.5-credit, graduate-level course, ʹʹInformationist Seminar: Bringing the Evidence to Practice,ʹʹ was offered in October to December 2006. In this team-taught course, a series of lectures by course faculty and panel discussions involving outside experts were combined with in-class discussion, homework exercises, and a major project that involved choosing and answering, in both oral and written form, a real-world question based on a case scenario in clinical or public health practice. Conclusion: This course represents an approach that could be replicated in other academic health centers with similar pools of expertise. Ongoing journal clubs that reiterate the question-and-answer process with new questions derived from clinical and public health practice and incorporate peer review and faculty mentoring would reinforce the skills acquired in the seminar.
  • Journal title
    Journal of the Medical Library Association (JMLA)
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Journal of the Medical Library Association (JMLA)
  • Record number

    662314