Health care workers in Africa access a broad range of topics using evidence-based online medical information.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
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Health care workers (HCW) rely on Internet-based medical resources to obtain current evidence-based clinical guidelines. While such resources are being used with increasing frequency in developed countries, they have not been broadly employed in resource-limited settings (RLS). To investigate the feasibility and the types of medical content used by HCW in RLS, we studied one Internet-based medical resource used in the United States, (UpToDate©) in four hospitals in Africa. Health care workers were trained on how to use this resource and surveyed over a six month study period. Automated topic tracking found that HCW searched a variety of medical topics. About 78% of HCW reported daily or weekly use of the Internet-based medical resource and 70% felt the tool was very useful for teaching. All users report the tool increased their clinical knowledge. This descriptive study suggests that Internet-based medical information resources are feasible in RLS and are accessed for a broad variety of medical topics. Supplemental content providing guidance when minimal diagnostic and therapeutic options exist could increase its relevance in RLS. With increased availability, Internet-based medical information could enhance current global health care initiatives to improve providers' knowledge, clinical practice and potentially patient outcomes.
publication date
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Research
keywords
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Access to Information
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Evidence-Based Medicine
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Health Information Systems
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Internet
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Personnel, Hospital
Identity
Scopus Document Identifier
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
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10.1080/17441692.2012.685488
PubMed ID
Additional Document Info
has global citation frequency
volume
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