首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of continuing education in the health professions >Information-seeking behaviors and reflective practice.
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Information-seeking behaviors and reflective practice.

机译:寻求信息的行为和反思性实践。

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INTRODUCTION: As they care for patients, physicians raise questions, but they pursue only a portion of them. Without the best information and evidence, care and patient safety may be compromised. Understanding when and why problems prompt physicians to look for information and integrate results into their knowledge base is critical and shapes one part of reflection about care. This study explores the role of the Internet in gathering medical information as one step in that reflective practice, the barriers to its use, and changes in utilization over time. METHODS: A questionnaire with 18 items adapted from previous studies was sent by facsimile to a randomly selected sample of U.S. physicians in all specialties and active in practice. RESULTS: Specific patient problems and latest research in a specific topic most often prompt physicians to search on the Internet. Younger physicians and female physicians were most likely to seek information on a specific patient problem. Only 9% of all respondents (n = 2,500) searched for information during a patient encounter. When unsure about diagnostic and management issues for a complex case, 41.3% chose to consult with a colleague or read from a text (22.8%). Searching most often occurred at home after work (38.2%) or during breaks in the day (35.7%). Most (68.7%) found the information they were looking for more than 51% of the time. Searching was facilitated by knowing preferred sites and access in the clinical setting. The greatest barriers to answering clinical questions included a lack of specific information and too much information to scan. DISCUSSION: Although physicians are increasingly successful and confident in their Internet searching to answer questions raised in patient care, few choose to seek medical information during a patient encounter. Internet information access may facilitate overall reflection on practice; physicians do not yet use this access in a just-in-time manner for immediately solving difficult patient problems but instead continue to rely on consultation with colleagues. Professional association Web sites and point-of-care databases are helpful. From physicians' use of the Internet, professionals in continuing medical education must learn which search engines and sites are trusted and preferred.
机译:简介:在照顾病人时,医生会提出问题,但他们只追求其中的一部分。没有最好的信息和证据,可能会影响护理和患者安全。了解何时以及为什么问题会促使医生寻找信息并将结果整合到他们的知识库中是至关重要的,并且构成了对护理的反思的一部分。这项研究探索了互联网在收集医学信息方面的作用,这是反思性实践的一步,它的使用障碍以及随着时间的推移利用率的变化。方法:通过传真向所有专业的随机抽取的美国医生样本中随机抽取18个项目,这些调查项目取自先前的研究,并且活跃于实践中。结果:特定患者的问题和特定主题的最新研究通常会促使医生在Internet上进行搜索。年轻的医生和女医生最有可能寻求有关特定患者问题的信息。在所有患者中,只有9%的受访者(n = 2,500)搜索信息。当不确定复杂案例的诊断和管理问题时,有41.3%的人选择咨询同事或阅读文本(22.8%)。搜索最常见于下班后在家中(38.2%)或白天休息时(35.7%)。大多数(68.7%)的用户超过51%的时间找到了他们正在寻找的信息。通过了解临床环境中的首选位点和访问渠道,可以方便地进行搜索。回答临床问题的最大障碍包括缺乏特定信息和太多信息而无法扫描。讨论:尽管医师在互联网搜索中回答患者护理中提出的问题方面越来越成功,并且充满信心,但很少有人选择在患者遭遇期间寻求医疗信息。互联网信息的访问可以促进对实践的全面反思;医师还没有以即时的方式使用此访问权限立即解决患者的难题,而是继续依靠与同事的协商。专业协会网站和即时护理数据库很有帮助。通过医师对Internet的使用,继续医学教育的专业人员必须了解哪些搜索引擎和站点是受信任的和首选的。

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