1 / 15

Online Searching for On-Duty Nurses

Online Searching for On-Duty Nurses. Elizabeth Bair LIS 560 Spring 2007. Who are nurses?. Mostly female, with a male minority Average age of 46.8 years old Mostly work part time Most nurses work in hospitals (56.2%) Nurses have a variety of educational degrees.

leolaw
Télécharger la présentation

Online Searching for On-Duty Nurses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Online Searching for On-Duty Nurses Elizabeth Bair LIS 560 Spring 2007

  2. Who are nurses? • Mostly female, with a male minority • Average age of 46.8 years old • Mostly work part time • Most nurses work in hospitals (56.2%) • Nurses have a variety of educational degrees Health Resources and Services Administration. (n.d.) The Registered Nurse Population: Findings from the 2004 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses. Retrieved May 6, 2007, from http://bhpr.hrsa.gov/healthworkforce/rnsurvey04/

  3. What do nurses need? • Patient-care based information needs • Medications • Procedures • Specific patient conditions • General nursing information needs • Up-to date research on treatments • General condition information • Patient-care based needs favored Blythe, J., & Royle, J. (1993). Assessing nurses’ information needs in the work environment [Electronic version]. Bulletin of the Medical Library Association, 81(4), 433-435.

  4. How do nurses fulfill their needs? • Oral and written sources • Consultations with doctors • Patient records • Monitor printouts • Drug Reference manuals • They are quick and easily accessible Concoran-Perry, S., & Graves, J. (1990). Supplemental-Information-Seeking Behavior of Cardiovascular Nurses. Research in Nursing and Health, 13, 119-127.

  5. Evidence Based Practice • Current trend in nursing • Must stay up-to date on research • Increases treatment effectiveness

  6. What would be useful? • Nurses realize the benefits of a evidence-based practice • Concise, accurate information source on-ward • Technology can fill this need

  7. Barriers to Information Seeking • Lack of Time • Confusing Search Systems • Lack of Information Skills Pettengill, M. M., Gillies, D. A., & Clark, C. C. (1994). Factors encouraging and discouraging the use of nursing research findings. IMAGE: Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 26(2), 143-147.

  8. Module 1: Searching Online Strategies to help you find what you need

  9. Beginning Activity • Pick a topic • Current treatments for childhood leukemia • Current research on treating heart attacks • Drug therapy for Multiple Sclerosis • Search CINAHL for articles about your topic for 5 minutes • Note how many relevant results you found • Were there too few or too many? • Was it hard to find exactly what you were looking for?

  10. Why Learn How to Search? • Gain access to up-to-date nursing research • Institute a more evidence-based practice • Provide better care for patients • Cut down on time spent searching • Produce fewer, more relevant results

  11. Searching & Indexes • Search Engines = Quick Access to Electronic Index • Use specific vocabulary terms to mean many different things • Activity: Think about or try searching a book without using its index

  12. Subject Searching • Another way to use the index • Searches for articles attached to a subject • Often found in different spots • Found in CINAHL under Search tools

  13. Synonyms • Not all indexes use the same terms • Synonym searching can increase or refine results • Activity: Brainstorm all of the synonyms you can think of for your earlier search

  14. Boolean Searching • How words can be combined in a search • AND – combines the two or more words in the search (leukemia AND pediatric) • OR – searches for any word in the search (heart disease OR heart attack) • NOT – searches for one term excluding results with the other (cancer NOT liver) • “Exact Phrase” – searches for the exact phrase within quotes

  15. Ending Activity • Search CINAHL for the same topic you used previously for 5 more minutes • Use subject searches, synonyms & boolean searches • Did you find more relevant articles? • Was the search easier to use? • Discuss your results on the Discussion Board

More Related