Abstract
ObjectiveAt an academic health sciences library serving a wide variety of disciplines, studying library users’ technology use provides necessary information on intersection points for library services. Administering a similar survey annually for five years generated a holistic view of users’ technology needs and preferences over time.MethodsFrom 2012 to 2016, the University of Florida Health Science Center Library (HSCL) annually administered a sixteen-to-twenty question survey addressing health sciences users’ technology awareness and use and their interest in using technology to engage with the library and its services. The survey was distributed throughout the HSC via email invitation from liaison librarians to their colleges and departments and advertisement on the HSCL home page.ResultsSmartphone ownership among survey respondents was nearly universal, and a majority of respondents also owned a tablet. While respondents were likely to check library hours, use medical apps, and use library electronic resources from their mobile devices, they were unlikely to friend or follow the library on Facebook or Twitter or send a call number from the catalog. Respondents were more likely to have used EndNote than any other citation management tool, but over 50% of respondents had never used each tool or never heard of it.ConclusionsAnnual review of survey results has allowed librarians to identify users’ needs and interests, leading to incremental changes in services offered. Reviewing the aggregate data allowed strategic consideration of how technology impacts library interactions with users, with implications toward library marketing, training, and service development.
Highlights
As technology continues to develop, health sciences information professionals have a responsibility to stay up-to-date on emerging and existing technologies that their communities are using in order to adapt their programs and offerings to best support those communities
The Health Science Center Library (HSCL) at the University of Florida (UF) has administered an annual technology survey to assess how library patrons prefer to use their mobile devices to interact with the library and Journal of the Medical Library Association what types of technologies they use
Beginning in 2012, HSCL librarians annually administered a survey designed by the University of Southern California (USC) Health Sciences Libraries to address health sciences students’ and faculty’s awareness and use of technology, as well as their interest in using technology to engage with the library and its services [4]
Summary
As technology continues to develop, health sciences information professionals have a responsibility to stay up-to-date on emerging and existing technologies that their communities are using in order to adapt their programs and offerings to best support those communities. The Health Science Center Library (HSCL) at the University of Florida (UF) has administered an annual technology survey to assess how library patrons prefer to use their mobile devices to interact with the library and Journal of the Medical Library Association what types of technologies they use. Staff, and students in UF’s six Health Science Center (HSC) colleges (Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Public Health & Health Professions, and Veterinary Medicine) participated in the survey. Prior to this effort, the HSCL had conducted an initial foray into studying the technology habits of library users [1]. The results of that survey suggested that additional investigation in this area would be useful to the HSCL, given the changing mobile technology landscape
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