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Tytuł:
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Report from the Medical Library Association's InSight Initiative Summit 2: Meeting the Evolving Information Needs of Library Stakeholders.
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Autorzy:
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Akers KG; Editor-in-Chief, Journal of the Medical Library Association, and Biomedical Research and Data Specialist, Shiffman Medical Library, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, .
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Źródło:
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Journal of the Medical Library Association : JMLA [J Med Libr Assoc] 2019 Apr; Vol. 107 (2), pp. 137-150. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Apr 01.
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Typ publikacji:
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Journal Article
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Język:
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English
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Imprint Name(s):
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Original Publication: Chicago, IL : Medical Library Association, c2002-
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MeSH Terms:
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Health Services Needs and Demand*
Libraries, Medical*
Library Associations*/organization & administration
Library Services*
Humans ; Information Seeking Behavior ; Needs Assessment
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References:
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J Med Libr Assoc. 2018 Apr;106(2):175-183. (PMID: 29632440)
J Med Libr Assoc. 2018 Oct;106(4):554-572. (PMID: 30271306)
J Hosp Med. 2018 Nov;13(11):764-769. (PMID: 30484779)
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Entry Date(s):
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Date Created: 20190426 Date Completed: 20191209 Latest Revision: 20200225
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Update Code:
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20240105
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PubMed Central ID:
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PMC6466501
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DOI:
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10.5195/jmla.2019.669
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PMID:
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31019382
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At the Medical Library Association's InSight Initiative Summit 2, held September 27-28, 2018, academic and hospital librarians joined with publishing industry partners to develop a deeper shared understanding of technology- and social interaction-driven changes in how health sciences researchers and clinicians discover and consume information in their fields. Through a mixture of keynote talks, a panel discussion with health care professionals, and small-group problem-solving exercises, the summit program invited participants to collaboratively develop strategies for helping users recognize the value of curated or peer-reviewed content obtained through institutional access channels. Themes of the summit included the existence of different user modes of information discovery and access, user reliance on professional societies and Twitter as information sources, the extent to which smartphones are used to find medical information, the importance of inducing disorienting dilemmas in library users that cause them to recognize librarians as true partners in information seeking and research, the dangers of depending on non-curated information, and the need for publishers and librarians to work together to ease barriers to access and enrich the user experience.