首页> 外文期刊>World Journal of Surgery: Official Journal of the Societe Internationale de Chirurgie, Collegium Internationale Chirurgiae Digestivae, and of the International Association of Endocrine Surgeons >Relevance of electronic health information to doctors in the developing world: results of the Ptolemy Project's Internet-based Health Information Study (IBHIS).
【24h】

Relevance of electronic health information to doctors in the developing world: results of the Ptolemy Project's Internet-based Health Information Study (IBHIS).

机译:电子健康信息与发展中国家医生的相关性:托勒密项目基于互联网的健康信息研究(IBHIS)的结果。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

The aim of this study was to determine the current usage, relevance, and preferences for electronic health information (EHI) in the participant surgeons' clinical, research, and teaching activities. The Internet-Based Health Information Survey (IBHIS) was conducted from August to December 2003. Thirty-seven doctors (primarily practicing in East Africa) participated, all of whom had been using the Ptolemy resources for at least 6 months. Survey questions concerned time spent reading medical literature, preferred information sources, preferred type of publication, relevance, preference for western versus local medical literature, and academic productivity. Among the 75 eligible participants, 37 (48%) responded. From these responses it was found that African surgeons with access to EHI read more than articles than they did before they had such access, and they find that the information obtained is highly relevant to their clinical, teaching, and research activities. They prefer electronic journals to textbooks and are more inclined to change their practice based on information found in western journals than local journals. Ptolemy resources helped the respondents who reported academic work write a total of 33 papers for presentation or publication. Overall, access to EHI enables doctors in Africa to read more, is relevant, and contributes directly to academic productivity; thus Western medical literature is useful in the developing world, and EHI delivery should continue to expand.
机译:这项研究的目的是确定参加者外科医生的临床,研究和教学活动中电子健康信息(EHI)的当前用法,相关性和偏好。基于Internet的健康信息调查(IBHIS)于2003年8月至12月进行。共有37位医生(主要在东非执业)参加了这些医生,他们都使用了托勒密资源至少6个月。调查问题涉及阅读医学文献所花费的时间,首选的信息来源,首选的出版物类型,相关性,偏爱西方与本地医学文献以及学术生产率。在75位符合条件的参与者中,有37位(48%)回答。从这些答复中,发现拥有EHI的非洲外科医生阅读的文章多于他们获得此文章之前的文章,他们发现所获得的信息与其临床,教学和研究活动高度相关。他们更喜欢电子期刊而不是教科书,与本地期刊相比,他们更倾向于根据西方期刊中发现的信息改变其做法。托勒密资源帮助举报学术工作的受访者撰写了33篇论文供发表或发表。总体而言,获得EHI可以使非洲的医生阅读更多,具有相关性并直接有助于提高学术效率;因此,西方医学文献在发展中国家是有用的,EHI的交付应继续扩大。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号