Library and Informatics Training May Improve Question Formulation among Public Health Practitioners

Authors

  • Heather Ganshorn Health Information Network Calgary, Holy Cross Site

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18438/B8261T

Keywords:

information literacy, instruction, medical libraries, healthcare workers

Abstract

A review of:
Eldredge, Jonathan D., et al. “The Effect of Training on Question Formulation among Public Health Practitioners: Results from a Randomized Controlled Trial.” Journal of the Medical Library Association 96.4 (2008): 299-309. 28 Aug 2009 .

Objectives – To determine whether providing library and informatics training to public health professionals would increase the number and sophistication of work-related questions asked by these workers.

Design – Randomised controlled trial.

Setting – New Mexico Department of Health.

Subjects – Public health professionals from a variety of professions, including administrators, nursing professionals, nutritionists, epidemiologists, physicians, social workers, and others.

Methods – All subjects received a three-hour training session on finding evidence-based public health information, with a focus on using PubMed. Two sessions were offered, two weeks apart. Participants were randomised to either an intervention group, which received instruction on the first date, or a control group, which received instruction on the second date.

The intervening two weeks constitute the study period, in which both groups were surveyed by e-mail about their work-related question generation. Three times per week, subjects received e-mail reminders asking them to submit survey responses regarding all questions that had arisen in their practice, along with information about their attempts to answer them. Questions were tallied, and totals were compared between the two groups.

Questions were also analysed for level of sophistication, and classified by the investigators as “background” questions, which are asked when one has little knowledge of the field, and can usually be answered using textbooks or other reference sources; and “foreground” questions, which are often asked when an individual is familiar with the subject, and looking for more sophisticated information that is usually found in journals and similar sources. This scheme for classifying questions was developed by Richardson and Mulrow (2001).

Main Results

The investigators found differences in both the number and sophistication of the questions asked between the control and intervention groups. The control group averaged only 0.69 questions per participant during the two-week observation period, while the intervention group averaged 1.24 questions. Investigators also found that a higher percentage of the questions asked by the intervention group were foreground questions (50.0%, versus 42.9%) for the control group. However, when two-tailed t-test analysis was performed on both the frequency of questions and the level of sophistication, the findings were no statistically significant within a 95% confidence interval.

Conclusion

This study suggests that library and informatics training for public health professionals may increase the number of questions that they ask on work-related topics, and also the sophistication of these questions. However, more studies need to be done to confirm these findings.

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Author Biography

Heather Ganshorn, Health Information Network Calgary, Holy Cross Site

Heather Ganshorn is a librarian with the Health Information Network Calgary, a partnership in which the University of Calgary Health Sciences Library provides library services on contract to Alberta Health Services staff and patients in the Calgary Region. Heather provides library services to researchers and staff of the Alberta Cancer Corridor at the Holy Cross Site in Calgary.

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Published

2009-12-14

How to Cite

Ganshorn, H. (2009). Library and Informatics Training May Improve Question Formulation among Public Health Practitioners. Evidence Based Library and Information Practice, 4(4), 71–73. https://doi.org/10.18438/B8261T

Issue

Section

Evidence Summaries

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