Abstract

Background: Librarians often teach evidence-based practice (EBP) within health sciences curricula. It is not known what teaching methods are most effective.Methods: A systematic review of the literature was conducted searching CINAHL, EMBASE, ERIC, LISTA, PubMed, Scopus, and others. Searches were completed through December 2014. No limits were applied. Hand searching of Medical Library Association annual meeting abstracts from 2009–2014 was also completed. Studies must be about EBP instruction by a librarian within undergraduate or graduate health sciences curricula and include skills assessment. Studies with no assessment, letters and comments, and veterinary education studies were excluded. Data extraction and critical appraisal were performed to determine the risk of bias of each study.Results: Twenty-seven studies were included for analysis. Studies occurred in the United States (20), Canada (3), the United Kingdom (1), and Italy (1), with 22 in medicine and 5 in allied health. Teaching methods included lecture (20), small group or one-on-one instruction (16), computer lab practice (15), and online learning (6). Assessments were quizzes or tests, pretests and posttests, peer review, search strategy evaluations, clinical scenario assignments, or a hybrid. Due to large variability across studies, meta-analysis was not conducted.Discussion: Findings were weakly significant for positive change in search performance for most studies. Only one study compared teaching methods, and no one teaching method proved more effective. Future studies could conduct multisite interventions using randomized or quasi-randomized controlled trial study design and standardized assessment tools to measure outcomes.

Highlights

  • Librarians often teach evidence-based practice (EBP) within health sciences curricula

  • N Instruction must be related to EBP including concepts such as population, intervention, comparison, outcomes (PICO); the evidence-based medicine cycle; searching of the literature to apply to clinical practice; or critical appraisal. n Instruction may be integrated into the curriculum or be a standalone course. n Study population must be health sciences–related at the diploma, undergraduate, or graduate level. n Instruction must include assessments of learner skills

  • In selecting studies to include in the systematic review, search results were divided into five sets, and each set was assigned to two members of the research team

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Summary

Methods

A systematic review of the literature was conducted searching CINAHL, EMBASE, ERIC, LISTA, PubMed, Scopus, and others. Hand searching of Medical Library Association annual meeting abstracts from 2009– 2014 was completed. Studies must be about EBP instruction by a librarian within undergraduate or graduate health sciences curricula and include skills assessment. Letters and comments, and veterinary education studies were excluded. Data extraction and critical appraisal were performed to determine the risk of bias of each study

Results
Discussion
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Methods of instruction
Study design and statistical methods
Limitations
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