Making the best use of medical librarians
A nice little piece in the September 16, 2006, issue of BMJ Career Focus on how librarians fit with EBM, what exactly they do, and how to ask for their assistance.
The FPIN Librarian Community is a network of librarians who have a common interest in promoting the use of evidence-based information at the point of care. More information about the Family Physicians Inquiries Network (FPIN) is available at our website.
A nice little piece in the September 16, 2006, issue of BMJ Career Focus on how librarians fit with EBM, what exactly they do, and how to ask for their assistance.
Need a little fodder for your promotion bid this year? Need to justify your budget? Always wanted to see your name in print? Evaluate your services. Measure your impact. Start planning ahead now to make a paper or poster presentation at an upcoming conference.
Going to the annual meeting of the Midwest or Midcontinental chapters of MLA? Be sure to say hello!
Many of you may be familiar with Evidence-Based Practice (EBP), a monthly publication from the FPIN network. What you may not know is that as of this year, articles from EBP are being indexed by Elsevier and included in Scopus. For those of you who aren't familiar with the publication, EBP takes an independent look at best-available evidence for primary care practice, and also includes a patient education piece (co-authored by an FPIN librarian, Jean Blackwell) that each month translates one popular Clinical Inquiry topic into lay terms. The evidence-based patient handouts are freely available from the FPIN website. The online archive of EBP is available to subscribers.