国家医学图书馆(NLM) DOCLINE®馆际互借系统在选定公共卫生事件期间的请求模式分析。

Colette Hochstein, Sharon Han, Paul Juneau, Gillian Takamaru, Elisabeth Unger
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引用次数: 1

摘要

DOCLINE®是美国国家医学图书馆(NLM)馆际互借(ILL)请求系统,旨在更好地了解其在公共卫生事件(phe)期间提供信息访问方面的作用。这些数据可以指导服务改进,特别是在此类事件期间将公共卫生界与最新研究联系起来时。四次美国公共卫生疫情被用来衡量DOCLINE支持信息寻求行为的能力:2019年夏季麻疹疫情期间的请求;2019年秋季电子烟肺损伤事件;2018-2019年流感季节;以及2020年COVID-19爆发的早期阶段。NLM医学主题词用于识别相关请求。NLM的一组图书管理员分析了请求量、地理和机构类型以及内容的趋势。虽然与卫生保健有关的请求的数目在总数中所占的百分比并不大,但是在选定的期间有明显的增加。它们来自不同的地理位置,与疫情地区有一些明显的交集。医院提出的请求最多。这项调查提供了证据,证明DOCLINE数据可用于驱动系统开发,并且具有快速周转时间的目标ILL系统是PHEs期间特别有价值的图书馆资源。
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Analysis of National Library of Medicine (NLM) DOCLINE® Interlibrary Loan System Request Patterns during Selected Public Health Events.

DOCLINE®, the U.S. National Library of Medicine's (NLM) interlibrary loan (ILL) request system, sought to better understand its role in providing information access during public health events (PHEs). Such data can guide service improvement, especially when connecting the public health community to the latest research during such incidents. Four U.S. public health outbreaks were used to measure DOCLINE's capacity to support information seeking behaviors: requests during the Summer 2019 measles outbreak; the Fall 2019 e-cigarette lung injury event; the 2018-2019 influenza season; and early stages of the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak. NLM Medical Subject Headings were used to identify related requests. A team of NLM librarians analyzed these for trends in request volume, geographic and institution type, and content. While the number of PHE-related requests did not make up a large percentage of the total placed, there were identifiable increases during the selected periods. These originated from a variety of geographic locations, with some noticeable intersection with outbreak areas. Hospitals initiated the most requests. This investigation provides evidence that DOCLINE data can be used to drive system development and that a targeted ILL system with rapid turnaround times is an especially valuable library resource during PHEs.

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Analysis of National Library of Medicine (NLM) DOCLINE® Interlibrary Loan System Request Patterns during Selected Public Health Events.
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