Abstract

BackgroundThe widespread availability of internet-connected smart devices in the health care setting has the potential to improve the delivery of research evidence to the care pathway and fulfill health care professionals’ information needs.ObjectiveThis study aims to evaluate the frequency with which physiotherapists experience information needs, the capacity of digital information resources to fulfill these needs, and the specific types of resources they use to do so.MethodsA total of 38 participants (all practicing physiotherapists; 19 females, 19 males) were randomly assigned to complete three 20-question multiple-choice questionnaire (MCQ) examinations under 3 conditions in a randomized crossover study design: assisted by a web browser, assisted by a federated search portal system, and unassisted. MCQ scores, times, and frequencies of information needs were recorded for overall examination-level and individual question-level analyses. Generalized estimating equations were used to assess differences between conditions for the primary outcomes. A log file analysis was conducted to evaluate participants’ web search and retrieval behaviors.ResultsParticipants experienced an information need in 55.59% (845/1520) MCQs (assisted conditions only) and exhibited a mean improvement of 10% and 16% in overall examination scores for the federated search and web browser conditions, respectively, compared with the unassisted condition (P<.001). In the web browser condition, Google was the most popular resource and the only search engine used, accounting for 1273 (64%) of hits, followed by PubMed (195 hits; 10% of total). In the federated search condition, Wikipedia and PubMed were the most popular resources with 1518 (46% of total) and 1273 (39% of total) hits, respectively.ConclusionsIn agreement with the findings of previous research studies among medical physicians, the results of this study demonstrate that physiotherapists frequently experience information needs. This study provides new insights into the preferred digital information resources used by physiotherapists to fulfill these needs. Future research should clarify the implications of physiotherapists’ apparent high reliance on Google, whether these results reflect the authentic clinical environment, and whether fulfilling clinical information needs alters practice behaviors or improves patient outcomes.

Highlights

  • Health Care Professionals’ Information Seeking Behaviors: A Brief HistoryThe ubiquity of internet-connected smart devices in the clinical setting [1] and the availability of preappraised point-of-care evidence summaries [2,3] have changed how health care professionals seek, consume, and implement information in the care pathway [4]

  • This study provides new insights into the preferred digital information resources used by physiotherapists to fulfill these needs

  • An increasing proportion of health care professionals use these devices to inform their practice [1]. This change has been charted in thousands of studies [6] and syntheses of studies [7,8], which have demonstrated the use of web-connected smart devices for fulfilling clinical information needs [5,8,9,10,11]

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Summary

Introduction

The ubiquity of internet-connected smart devices in the clinical setting [1] and the availability of preappraised point-of-care evidence summaries [2,3] have changed how health care professionals seek, consume, and implement information in the care pathway [4]. An increasing proportion of health care professionals use these devices to inform their practice [1] This change has been charted in thousands of studies [6] and syntheses of studies [7,8], which have demonstrated the use of web-connected smart devices for fulfilling clinical information needs [5,8,9,10,11]. The widespread availability of internet-connected smart devices in the health care setting has the potential to improve the delivery of research evidence to the care pathway and fulfill health care professionals’ information needs

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