Determination of continuing medical education needs of clinicians from a literature search study, Part I. The study.
- 1 July 1977
- journal article
- other
- Vol. 65 (3) , 330-7
Abstract
Continuing medical education is an area of current concern to health sciences librarians. A comprehensive study of literature searches requested by physicians and by fourth-year medical students serving their five-week preceptorship with a rural physician was conducted: (1) to determine if there is any pattern to the requests received so that areas of study for continuing medical education can be ascertained; and (2) to determine whether there is any appreciable difference in nature and complexity between those searches requested by clinicians and those requested by medical student preceptees. Literature search requests were examined in terms of individual MeSH subjects, subcategories, and categories for each subject covered in every search. This analysis has demonstrated that assessing the clinical problems of practicing physicians may be one method of determining needed continuing medical education topics.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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- A quality filtering system for medical literatureAcademic Medicine, 1975
- BOOKS in clinical practice 1971–1975Postgraduate Medicine, 1974
- Influence of the scholar.1968
- ROLE OF THE LIBRARY IN LEARNING TO LEARN CLINICAL MEDICINE.1964