“We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners
Introduction – The purpose of this study was to undertake website usability testing of the Saskatchewan Health Information Resources Partnership (SHIRP) online library website,. a digital library for healthcare providers working in the province of Saskatchewan, to determine whether the SHIRP website...
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University of Alberta
2014-07-01
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Online Access: | https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/jchla/index.php/jchla/article/view/22538 |
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doaj-2a81279b297446b2b79a19803d5e8cce2020-11-25T01:02:45ZengUniversity of AlbertaJournal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association1708-68922014-07-0132210.5596/c11-024“We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitionersChristine J. NeilsonVirginia WilsonIntroduction – The purpose of this study was to undertake website usability testing of the Saskatchewan Health Information Resources Partnership (SHIRP) online library website,. a digital library for healthcare providers working in the province of Saskatchewan, to determine whether the SHIRP website is intuitive for healthcare practitioners to use. Methods: Thirteen volunteers from four locations in the province participated in a usability test that included a portion devoted to the completion of tasks, as well as a series of semi-structured interview questions. Data were analyzed and themes were identified that were used to redesign the SHIRP website. Results – Nine out of the 13 main menu terms on the SHIRP website were problematic. A relatively low number of participants completed the assigned tasks on the first try. The SHIRP website was determined to be unwieldy and not completely intuitive. Conclusions – Asking front line healthcare providers what they need and want in an online library website should be the first step in creating or redesigning such a site. The time available to healthcare providers for doing library research is often limited, so the site needs to be simple, clean, and fast to use.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/jchla/index.php/jchla/article/view/22538 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Christine J. Neilson Virginia Wilson |
spellingShingle |
Christine J. Neilson Virginia Wilson “We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association |
author_facet |
Christine J. Neilson Virginia Wilson |
author_sort |
Christine J. Neilson |
title |
“We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners |
title_short |
“We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners |
title_full |
“We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners |
title_fullStr |
“We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners |
title_full_unstemmed |
“We want it now and we want it easy”: Usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners |
title_sort |
“we want it now and we want it easy”: usability testing of an online health library for healthcare practitioners |
publisher |
University of Alberta |
series |
Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association |
issn |
1708-6892 |
publishDate |
2014-07-01 |
description |
Introduction – The purpose of this study was to undertake website usability testing of the Saskatchewan Health Information Resources Partnership (SHIRP) online library website,. a digital library for healthcare providers working in the province of Saskatchewan, to determine whether the SHIRP website is intuitive for healthcare practitioners to use. Methods: Thirteen volunteers from four locations in the province participated in a usability test that included a portion devoted to the completion of tasks, as well as a series of semi-structured interview questions. Data were analyzed and themes were identified that were used to redesign the SHIRP website. Results – Nine out of the 13 main menu terms on the SHIRP website were problematic. A relatively low number of participants completed the assigned tasks on the first try. The SHIRP website was determined to be unwieldy and not completely intuitive. Conclusions – Asking front line healthcare providers what they need and want in an online library website should be the first step in creating or redesigning such a site. The time available to healthcare providers for doing library research is often limited, so the site needs to be simple, clean, and fast to use. |
url |
https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/jchla/index.php/jchla/article/view/22538 |
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