Facilitating research amongst radiographers through information literacy workshops.

J Med Libr Assoc

National Institute for Health Research Doctoral Research Fellow, Stroke Research Team, Faculty of Health & Wellbeing, School of Nursing, University of Central Lancashire, Lancashire, United Kingdom.

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Despite a strong research presence at Lancashire Teaching Hospitals, allied health professionals were underrepresented in creating research linked to their clinical practice, prompting a collaboration between Library and Knowledge Services and Research and Innovation to improve staff skills in research.
  • A research engagement program was initiated in the diagnostic radiography department, which included six workshops attended by 16 staff members, resulting in increased library membership by 50%, a 133% rise in literature search requests, and improved self-efficacy in information literacy among participants.
  • The project produced customizable workshop plans and resources for healthcare professionals, gained several awards for innovation, and identified impacts and barriers to foster a home-grown research culture at the trust.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite a strong research presence in Lancashire Teaching Hospitals National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust (LTHTR), allied health professionals from the organization are underrepresented in developing and publicizing research that is inspired by day-to-day clinical practice and staff experiences. Two LTHTR departments, Library and Knowledge Services (LKS) and Research and Innovation (R&I), came together to enable a group of staff to develop the knowledge and skills that they needed to access information and create new "home grown" research.

Case Presentation: A clinical librarian and an academic research nurse created a research engagement program in the diagnostic radiography department at LTHTR, which included the development, delivery, and evaluation of 6 workshops. Sixteen individuals took part in these workshops, and data were collected on library usage, self-efficacy in information literacy, and research output before and after their delivery. Library membership increased by 50% among diagnostic radiography staff, literature search requests from this department increased by 133%, and all participants who attended at least 1 workshop reported an increased Information Literacy Self Efficacy Scale (ILSES) score. An increase in research activity and outputs was also attributed to the program.

Conclusions: This project has resulted in a set of freely available workshop plans and support resources that can be customized for other health care professionals and has won several awards for its innovative use of departmental collaboration. Through the evaluation of the program from workshop attendees and non-attenders, we have identified impacts, outputs, and barriers to engagement in order to continue to deliver this content to other departments and embed a home grown research culture at LTHTR.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7772987PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/jmla.2021.842DOI Listing

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