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Information retrieval at the point of care of community family physicians in Arab countries.

Jumana AntounJennifer LapinDennis Beck
Published in: Health information and libraries journal (2022)
This study is based on Jumana Antoun's PhD thesis at Walden University, USA examining the information retrieval behaviour of 72 community family physicians' at the point of care in eight Arab countries in the Eastern Mediterranean. The key findings were that participants looked for digital clinical information at the point of care on average 14.0 times per week with the majority (80.3%) using a mobile phone. Clinical information about medication dosage and side effects was the most sought clinical question, and patient education was the least. Almost half of the participants considered that they often found relevant (55.6%), useful (56.9%) and unbiased (58.3%) information. Whilst none of the factors examined predicted the physicians' self-reported effectiveness and efficiency at information retrieval, the implication for practice points clearly to the barriers and the need for curricula to focus on search strategies using free resources at the point of care.
Keyphrases
  • primary care
  • healthcare
  • health information
  • mental health
  • randomized controlled trial
  • systematic review
  • emergency department
  • social media