| Literature DB >> 23803299 |
Marlene Kritz1, Manfred Gschwandtner, Veronika Stefanov, Allan Hanbury, Matthias Samwald.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a large body of research suggesting that medical professionals have unmet information needs during their daily routines.Entities:
Keywords: Internet; information quality; information seeking behavior; language barriers; physicians; search engine
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23803299 PMCID: PMC3713956 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.2436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Subgroups of physicians.
| Definition/inclusion criteria | |
| Physician in training | Physicians that had completed a medical degree (MD) but were currently pursuing physician training to become a general practitioner or specialist. |
| Qualified physicians | Included all physicians that were working as qualified physicians (general practitioners and specialists) |
| General practitioners | Included all physicians that were working as qualified general practitioners |
| Specialists | Included all physicians who are were working as qualified specialists |
| Specialists without professorship | A subgroup of the specialists group, included physicians who are qualified specialists without having attained lectureship or professorship |
| Medical professors | A subgroup of the specialists group, included physicians who had completed a postgraduate lectureship qualification or were appointed university professors |
Comparisons between different groups of physicians.
|
| Medical qualification | Medical specialization | Academic qualification | |||
|
| Physician in training | Qualified physician | General practitioner | Specialist | Specialist without professorship | Medical professor |
| n/Na | 55/422 | 367/422 | 89/367 | 278/367 | 224/278 | 54/278 |
| % of N | 13 | 87 | 24 | 76 | 81 | 19 |
aN is based on the number of respondents that provided a response to the corresponding question in the questionnaire.
Figure 1Online resources used for obtaining medical information.
Time that physicians report having for answering complex questions (question: “How much time can you or are you generally willing to spend on trying to find the answer to an important, complex clinical question?”).
|
| Level of qualification | Level of medical specialization | Level of academic specialization |
| |||
| Qualified Physician | Physician in Training | General practitioner | Specialist | Specialist without professorship | Medical professor | Overall | |
| < 10 min. | 14 (50) | 6 (3) | 19 (17) | 12 (33) | 14 (30) | 6 (3) | 13 (53) |
| 10-20 min. | 33 (122) | 28 (15) | 38 (34) | 32 (88) | 33 (73) | 28 (15) | 33 (137) |
| 20-30 min. | 23 (85) | 32 (17) | 17 (15) | 25 (70) | 25 (55) | 28 (15) | 24 (102) |
| 30-40 min. | 17 (62) | 11 (6) | 18 (16) | 17 (46) | 19 (43) | 6 (3) | 16 (68) |
| > 40 min. | 12 (46) | 24 (13) | 8 (7) | 14 (39) | 10 (21) | 33 (18) | 14 (59) |
| Total | 100 (365) | 100 (54) | 100 (89) | 100 (276) | 100 (222) | 100 (54) | 100 (419) |
| Central tendency | Mode: | Mode: | Mode: | Mode: 10-20 minutes | Mode: 10-20 minutes | Mode: More than 40 minutes | Mode: 10-20 minutes |
| Statistical significance | χ2
4=9.619, | Not significant | χ2
4=25.3028, |
| |||
Overall frequency, reason, and consequence of failure to retrieve medical information from the Internet.
| Question | Categories | % (n/N) a |
|
| ||
|
| Never, Rarely | 41 (187/453) |
|
| Sometimes | 44 (199/453) |
|
| Often, Always | 15 (67/453) |
|
| ||
|
| Too many search results, too time-consuming to choose | 76 (278/368) |
|
| I was not sure how to formulate the query | 24 (90/368) |
|
| ||
|
| Do another search using search terms that get MORE SPECIFIC | 61 (261/427) |
|
| Do another search using search terms that get LESS SPECIFIC | 19 (81/427) |
|
| Nothing, I stop searching on the Internet | 9 (40/427) |
|
| I send an email/Skype/chat with a colleague | 8 (34/427) |
|
| I post the question in a medical forum/physician community | 3 (11/427) |
N is based on the number of respondents that provided a response to the corresponding question in the questionnaire.
Figure 2Responses to the question "How important do you perceive the following tools?", percentages of responses with the answer "Important" are illustrated.