Efficacy and efficiency of information retrieval of community family physicians at the point of care: exploring the associations with information and computer literacy

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Medical Library Association

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to measure the association between the efficacy/efficiency of digital information retrieval among community family physicians at the point of care and information and computer literacy. Methods: This study is a part of a cross-sectional anonymous online survey-based study among community family physicians who reported no affiliation with an academic institution in eight Arab countries. Results: A total of 72 physicians were included. The mean total score for the information literacy scale was 59.8 out of 91 (SD = 11.4). The mean score was 29.3 (SD = 5.6) out of 55 on the computer literacy scale. A one-way ANOVA revealed a statistically significant association between information literacy and information retrieval efficacy (F (2,69) = 4.466, p = 0.015) and efficiency of information retrieval (F (2.69) = 4.563, p = 0.014). Computer literacy was not associated with information retrieval efficacy or efficiency. Conclusion: The information and computer literacy scores of community family physicians in eight Arab countries are average. Information literacy, rather than computer literacy, is positively associated with the efficacy and efficiency of information retrieval at the point of care. There is room for improvement in evidence-based medicine curricula and continuous professional development to improve information literacy for better information retrieval and patient care. © 2023, Medical Library Association. All rights reserved.

Description

Keywords

Computer literacy, Digital literacy, Evidence-based medicine, Family physicians, arab countries, Information literacy, Computers, Cross-sectional studies, Health literacy, Humans, Information storage and retrieval, Physicians, family, Point-of-care systems, Surveys and questionnaires, Adult, Analysis of variance, Arab, Article, Drug efficacy, Evidence based medicine, General practitioner, Human, Information retrieval, Internet literacy, Patient care, Physician, Professional development, Cross-sectional study, Questionnaire

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By