Use of point‐of‐care online clinical evidence by junior and senior doctors in New South Wales public hospitals
- 16 June 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Internal Medicine Journal
- Vol. 35 (7) , 399-404
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-5994.2005.00836.x
Abstract
Background: The Clinical Information Access Program (CIAP), an online evidence retrieval system, provides NSW health professionals in public hospitals with 24 h access to information supporting evidence-based practice. Aim: To assess the frequency and type of CIAP usage by senior and junior medical staff and doctors' attitudes to CIAP. Methods: A convenience sample of 25% of doctors from 65 randomly selected public hospitals completed a survey. Junior (n = 392) and senior (n = 684) doctors' responses were compared using chi2 analyses and t-tests. Results: Most doctors had heard of CIAP (71.8%) and 60.6% had used it. More junior (72.4%) than senior (53.8%) doctors had used CIAP and junior doctors found it easier to use. Of the users 93.5% believed CIAP had the potential to improve patient care; 55.2% had directly experienced this. Most usage (61.5%) occurred at point-of-care; 74% of users found all/most of the information they sought and 71.6% found the search time to be 'good/excellent'. Users had increased their usage in the past year and predicted increased future usage. The most popular databases were Medline and MIMS. Age, access to other evidence, and lack of training, time and computer skills were associated with non-usage. Junior and senior users differed in 4 of 15 reasons for using CIAP. Conclusions: CIAP is used and valued by the majority of doctors. Patterns of usage, online experiences and the attitudes toward CIAP of senior doctors who use CIAP are relatively similar to those of junior doctors.6 page(sKeywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Impact of an Online Evidence System on Confidence in Decision Making in a Controlled SettingMedical Decision Making, 2005
- Do Clinicians Use Online Evidence to Support Patient Care? A Study of 55,000 CliniciansJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2003
- Variation in the use of online clinical evidence: a qualitative analysisInternational Journal of Medical Informatics, 2003
- Just in time information for clinicians: a questionnaire evaluation of the ATTRACT projectBMJ, 2001
- The use of evidence‐based medicine in the practice of consultant physicians. Results of a questionnaire surveyAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine, 2000
- National electronic Library for Health (NeLH)BMJ, 1999
- The Clinical Information Access ProjectThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1999
- Use of MEDLINE by Physicians for Clinical Problem SolvingJAMA, 1993
- Online Access to MEDLINE in Clinical SettingsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1990