BEING A CLINICAL LIBRARIAN IN PRIMARY CARE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 16
About This Presentation
Title:

BEING A CLINICAL LIBRARIAN IN PRIMARY CARE

Description:

BEING A CLINICAL LIBRARIAN IN PRIMARY CARE. Carsten Mandt ... Service Utilisation ... Explore ways to utilise electronic communication channels further as IT ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:109
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: cma61
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: BEING A CLINICAL LIBRARIAN IN PRIMARY CARE


1
BEING A CLINICAL LIBRARIAN IN PRIMARY CARE
  • Carsten Mandt
  • NHS Greater Glasgow Primary Care Division

2
Background The Organization
  • NHS Greater Glasgow Primary Care Division (NHSGG
    PCD)
  • Serves a population of about 1 million people
  • Circa 6,000 directly employed staff plus 2,500
    contractors and their staff
  • Yearly budget of about 440m
  • Working together with five different local
    authorities
  • Primary Care and Mental Health/Learning
    Disabilities Services

3
Background Library Resources
  • NHSScotland e-library (www.elib.scot.nhs.uk)
  • Free provision of 4000 fulltext electronic
    journals, 1000 electronic books and 100
    databases of journal articles
  • Maria Henderson Library, GG PCD
  • Print collection of ca. 200 journals and ca.
    10,000 books
  • Contracted staff are not automatically covered
    but can join as external members with a slightly
    restricted membership

4
Background The Role
  • Conceived in 2002 by the Clinical Governance and
    Library Services Managers
  • New post to support Clinical Governance and the
    use of evidence based care
  • Provision of expert information support for
    clinical, research and management decision making
    and policy setting within designated
    multidisciplinary teams

5
Background Job Description
  • Attend team meetings and help identify
    information needs
  • Perform expert literature searches
  • Current awareness services
  • Training staff in literature searching and
    critical appraisal
  • Managed jointly by Clinical Governance and
    Library Services Managers
  • Funded by Clinical Governance

6
The Role in Practice
  • Clinical Librarian not part in the day-to-day
    business of the wider library service
  • Mutual support for some aspects of library work
    (mainly literature searching, training and
    promotional activities)
  • Access to Clinical Librarian Service is distinct
    from access to other library services

7
The Role in Practice
  • Access to Clinical Librarian initially through
    Clinical Governance Manager
  • Ensure that librarian workload remains manageable
  • Ensure that projects with wider impact are
    prioritised
  • Link between Clinical Librarian and clinical
    teams and key practitioners
  • Service delivery is responsive and pro-active to
    meet users needs when and where they arise

8
The Role in Practice
  • Use of electronic communication whenever possible
  • After pilot year, the post was moved over
    entirely to Clinical Governance Department and
    now has no formal ties with library service
    although informal collaboration and mutual
    support remain

9
Services Provided
  • Literature searches
  • Monthly electronic guidelines newsletter,
    updating on British and international guidelines
  • Support for journal clubs
  • Training literature searching, critical
    appraisal (e.g. one-to-one or as part of journal
    club)

10
Service Utilisation
  • Anecdotal evidence suggests that services have
    been beneficial to those who have used them
  • However, overall uptake of services has been
    fairly (s)low and some parts of the organisation
    have not yet taken advantage of service
  • Uptake has been higher in Mental Health compared
    to Primary Care Services
  • Involvement with contracted staff has been
    particularly low

11
Service Utilisation
  • Only small amount of work is regular and ongoing
    (e.g. guidelines newsletter), the majority is
    project-based
  • Initially, focus was on supporting development of
    guidelines, ICPs and other policy documents
  • Over time, focus has shifted towards smaller,
    more localised service evaluation, (re-)design
    and development projects in individual clinical
    teams, services or primary care localities, as
    well as supporting central clinical governance
    functions (such as clinical risk or audit)

12
Challenges
  • Organisational barriers due to size and
    geo-graphical spread of services/staff ? less
    uptake of available services
  • Staff working in different parts of city
  • Do not always have regular access to
    internet/intranet/e-mail (or the necessary
    skills)
  • Remoteness of library services
  • Communication problems
  • Involving staff groups who have not traditionally
    used Divisional library services (e.g. GPs,
    practice nurses)

13
Challenges
  • Seeming reluctance to practice evidence-based
    health care
  • Lack of support for clinical staff spending time
    on EBP and CPD (time off, backfill etc)
  • Lack of appropriate skills (literature searching
    and critical appraisal) - and confidence in using
    theses skills
  • High cost (time) for clinicians and managers
  • Alternatives to local library services for some
    clinicians (e.g. BMA)

14
Challenges
  • Providing the right information quickly, at point
    of need, without compromising the quality of the
    information
  • Clinicians lack of time, and often skills, to
    handle the information appropriately themselves
  • ? Require help to find and appraise evidence
  • Librarians lack of in-depth clinical knowledge
  • ? critical appraisal of papers by librarians
    alone can be problematic
  • ? Partnership working is required between
    clinical staff and librarian

15
Current Developments
  • Revise procedures to provide a more timely and
    appropriate response to clinicians information
    needs and to cut down the costs involved for
    clinicians or managers
  • Explore ways to utilise electronic communication
    channels further as IT infrastructure and skill
    levels improve in the organization (e.g. use of
    electronic journal clubs)

16
Current Developments
  • Move towards further integration with clinical
    governance
  • Tie clinical librarian in with clinical audit and
    critical incident review processes
  • Liaise more closely with clinical governance
    leads in primary care and mental health to
    overcome some of the barriers that prevent staff
    from using services
  • Align the post more with organizational/NHS
    priorities
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com