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    J Med Libr Assoc. 2009 Jul;97(3):212-8.

    The selection of high-impact health informatics literature: a comparison of results between the content expert and the expert searcher.

    Source

    Ruth Lilly Medical Library, Indiana University School of Medicine, 975 West Walnut Street, IB-310, Indianapolis, IN 46202-512, USA. ewhipple@iupui.edu

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) National Resource Center for Health Information Technology (NRC) created the Health IT Bibliography that contains peer-reviewed articles in eleven different health informatics categories. To create the bibliography, informatics experts identified what they considered the seminal articles in each category.

    METHODS:

    Using the same eleven categories, an expert searcher (librarian) compiled a list of the "best" health informatics articles using information seeking and retrieval tools. The two sets of articles were then compared using high citation counts as a measure of value.

    RESULTS:

    The expert searcher set (8,230) contained more than 3 times the citations to chosen articles compared to the content expert set (2,382). Of 60 articles, 27% of those articles (n = 16) were included in both sets. The frequently cited journals were similar for both sets, and one-third of the same authors were cited in both sets.

    DISCUSSION:

    While citation counts and the timeliness of the articles differed in the two sets, the same authors and same journals were frequently present in both sets.

    CONCLUSION:

    A best practice for locating high-quality articles may be collaboration between expert searchers and content experts.

    PMID:
    19626147
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC2706443
    Free PMC Article

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