Electronic resources preferred by pediatric hospitalists for clinical care. Beck, J. B. & Tieder, J. S. Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA, 103(4):177–183, 2015. doi abstract bibtex Objectives: There is little research on pediatric hospitalists’ use of evidence-based resources. The aim of this study was to determine the electronic resources that pediatric hospitalists prefer. Methods: Using a web-based survey, the authors determined hospitalists’ preferred electronic resources, as well as their attitudes toward lifelong learning, practice, and experience characteristics. Results: One hundred sixteen hospitalists completed the survey. The most preferred resource for general information, patient handouts, and treatment was UpToDate. Online search engines were ranked second for general information and patient handouts. Conclusions: Pediatric hospitalists tend to utilize less rigorous electronic resources such as UpToDate and Google. These results can set a platform for discussing the quality of resources that pediatric hospitalists use.
@article{beck_electronic_2015,
title = {Electronic resources preferred by pediatric hospitalists for clinical care},
volume = {103},
doi = {10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003},
abstract = {Objectives: There is little research on pediatric hospitalists’ use of evidence-based resources. The aim of this study was to determine the electronic resources that pediatric hospitalists prefer. Methods: Using a web-based survey, the authors determined hospitalists’ preferred electronic resources, as well as their attitudes toward lifelong learning, practice, and experience characteristics. Results: One hundred sixteen hospitalists completed the survey. The most preferred resource for general information, patient handouts, and treatment was UpToDate. Online search engines were ranked second for general information and patient handouts. Conclusions: Pediatric hospitalists tend to utilize less rigorous electronic resources such as UpToDate and Google. These results can set a platform for discussing the quality of resources that pediatric hospitalists use.},
number = {4},
journal = {Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA},
author = {Beck, Jimmy B. and Tieder, Joel S.},
year = {2015},
keywords = {Attitude of Health Personnel, Hospitalists*, Hospitals, Information Storage and Retrieval / methods, Information Storage and Retrieval / statistics \& numerical data*, Jimmy B Beck, Joel S Tieder, MEDLINE, NCBI, NIH, NLM, National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine, PMC4613376, Pediatric*, PubMed Abstract, Search Engine / statistics \& numerical data*, Surveys and Questionnaires, doi:10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003, pmid:26512215},
pages = {177--183},
}
Downloads: 0
{"_id":"u2zNFeLHxEY9ZW86q","bibbaseid":"beck-tieder-electronicresourcespreferredbypediatrichospitalistsforclinicalcare-2015","author_short":["Beck, J. B.","Tieder, J. S."],"bibdata":{"bibtype":"article","type":"article","title":"Electronic resources preferred by pediatric hospitalists for clinical care","volume":"103","doi":"10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003","abstract":"Objectives: There is little research on pediatric hospitalists’ use of evidence-based resources. The aim of this study was to determine the electronic resources that pediatric hospitalists prefer. Methods: Using a web-based survey, the authors determined hospitalists’ preferred electronic resources, as well as their attitudes toward lifelong learning, practice, and experience characteristics. Results: One hundred sixteen hospitalists completed the survey. The most preferred resource for general information, patient handouts, and treatment was UpToDate. Online search engines were ranked second for general information and patient handouts. Conclusions: Pediatric hospitalists tend to utilize less rigorous electronic resources such as UpToDate and Google. These results can set a platform for discussing the quality of resources that pediatric hospitalists use.","number":"4","journal":"Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA","author":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Beck"],"firstnames":["Jimmy","B."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Tieder"],"firstnames":["Joel","S."],"suffixes":[]}],"year":"2015","keywords":"Attitude of Health Personnel, Hospitalists*, Hospitals, Information Storage and Retrieval / methods, Information Storage and Retrieval / statistics & numerical data*, Jimmy B Beck, Joel S Tieder, MEDLINE, NCBI, NIH, NLM, National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine, PMC4613376, Pediatric*, PubMed Abstract, Search Engine / statistics & numerical data*, Surveys and Questionnaires, doi:10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003, pmid:26512215","pages":"177–183","bibtex":"@article{beck_electronic_2015,\n\ttitle = {Electronic resources preferred by pediatric hospitalists for clinical care},\n\tvolume = {103},\n\tdoi = {10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003},\n\tabstract = {Objectives: There is little research on pediatric hospitalists’ use of evidence-based resources. The aim of this study was to determine the electronic resources that pediatric hospitalists prefer. Methods: Using a web-based survey, the authors determined hospitalists’ preferred electronic resources, as well as their attitudes toward lifelong learning, practice, and experience characteristics. Results: One hundred sixteen hospitalists completed the survey. The most preferred resource for general information, patient handouts, and treatment was UpToDate. Online search engines were ranked second for general information and patient handouts. Conclusions: Pediatric hospitalists tend to utilize less rigorous electronic resources such as UpToDate and Google. These results can set a platform for discussing the quality of resources that pediatric hospitalists use.},\n\tnumber = {4},\n\tjournal = {Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA},\n\tauthor = {Beck, Jimmy B. and Tieder, Joel S.},\n\tyear = {2015},\n\tkeywords = {Attitude of Health Personnel, Hospitalists*, Hospitals, Information Storage and Retrieval / methods, Information Storage and Retrieval / statistics \\& numerical data*, Jimmy B Beck, Joel S Tieder, MEDLINE, NCBI, NIH, NLM, National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine, PMC4613376, Pediatric*, PubMed Abstract, Search Engine / statistics \\& numerical data*, Surveys and Questionnaires, doi:10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003, pmid:26512215},\n\tpages = {177--183},\n}\n\n\n\n","author_short":["Beck, J. B.","Tieder, J. S."],"key":"beck_electronic_2015","id":"beck_electronic_2015","bibbaseid":"beck-tieder-electronicresourcespreferredbypediatrichospitalistsforclinicalcare-2015","role":"author","urls":{},"keyword":["Attitude of Health Personnel","Hospitalists*","Hospitals","Information Storage and Retrieval / methods","Information Storage and Retrieval / statistics & numerical data*","Jimmy B Beck","Joel S Tieder","MEDLINE","NCBI","NIH","NLM","National Center for Biotechnology Information","National Institutes of Health","National Library of Medicine","PMC4613376","Pediatric*","PubMed Abstract","Search Engine / statistics & numerical data*","Surveys and Questionnaires","doi:10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003","pmid:26512215"],"metadata":{"authorlinks":{}},"html":""},"bibtype":"article","biburl":"https://bibbase.org/zotero/katiedillon","dataSources":["Qf74gub9z54CooHnE"],"keywords":["attitude of health personnel","hospitalists*","hospitals","information storage and retrieval / methods","information storage and retrieval / statistics & numerical data*","jimmy b beck","joel s tieder","medline","ncbi","nih","nlm","national center for biotechnology information","national institutes of health","national library of medicine","pmc4613376","pediatric*","pubmed abstract","search engine / statistics & numerical data*","surveys and questionnaires","doi:10.3163/1536-5050.103.4.003","pmid:26512215"],"search_terms":["electronic","resources","preferred","pediatric","hospitalists","clinical","care","beck","tieder"],"title":"Electronic resources preferred by pediatric hospitalists for clinical care","year":2015}