| Literature DB >> 22130465 |
Roland Grad1, Pierre Pluye, Janique Johnson-Lafleur, Vera Granikov, Michael Shulha, Gillian Bartlett, Bernard Marlow.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A synopsis of new clinical research highlights important aspects of one study in a brief structured format. When delivered as email alerts, synopses enable clinicians to become aware of new developments relevant for practice. Once read, a synopsis can become a known item of clinical information. In time-pressured situations, remembering a known item may facilitate information retrieval by the clinician. However, exactly how synopses first delivered as email alerts influence retrieval at some later time is not known.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22130465 PMCID: PMC3278087 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.1683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Example of a synopsis.
Figure 2Questionnaire from Information Asessement Method (IAM) linked to one search in Essential Evidence Plus.
Push: Reports of cognitive impact by type
| Type of cognitive impacta | n |
| I learned something new. | 2543 |
| I was reassured. | 1637 |
| I am motivated to learn more. | 1570 |
| This information confirmed I did (will do) the right thing. | 1419 |
| This information had no impact at all on me or my practice. | 1018 |
| I am reminded of something I already knew. | 942 |
| My practice was (will be) changed and improved. | 922 |
| I am dissatisfied, as there is a problem with this information. | 258 |
| I am dissatisfied, as this information has no impact on my practice. | 126 |
| I think this information is potentially harmful. | 65 |
| I disagree with this information. | 37 |
aMore than one type of cognitive impact could be reported for each synopsis.
Participants' reasons for searches for clinical information
| Reason for searchinga | n |
| Address a clinical question, problem, or decision about a specific patient | 1310 |
| Look up something I had forgotten | 672 |
| Share information with a patient/caregiver | 624 |
| Exchange information with other health professionals | 520 |
| Search in general or for curiosity | 496 |
| Fulfill an educational or research objective | 434 |
| Plan, manage, coordinate, delegate, or monitor tasks with other health professionals | 197 |
aMore than one reason could be reported per search.
Number of dyads by type and time of occurrence
| Type of Dyad | Time Interval Between Reading in Push and Pull (Days) |
| Purposeful dyads, known item (n = 6) | 0 to 323 |
| Purposeful dyads, critical thinking (n = 3) | Same day |
| Serendipitous dyads, recognized when reread (n = 3) | 22 to 87 |
| Serendipitous dyads, not recognized (n = 5) | 19 to 317 |
| Excluded dyad, forgotten (n = 1) | 106 |
Figure 4Influence of push on pull: Why dyads are so rare.