Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research Setting

<b>Objective</b> ‐ This paper examines the role of a health information professional in a large multidisciplinary project to improve services for head injury.<br><b>Methods</b> ‐ An action research approach was taken, with the information professional acting as co‐ordin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Helen M. Seeley, Christine Urquhart, Peter Hutchinson, John Pickard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2010-06-01
Series:Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
Online Access:http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/7415/6963
id doaj-a50206da1bdc4545bb3a61b5a6420fbe
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a50206da1bdc4545bb3a61b5a6420fbe2020-11-24T21:15:53ZengUniversity of AlbertaEvidence Based Library and Information Practice1715-720X2010-06-01524762Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research SettingHelen M. SeeleyChristine UrquhartPeter HutchinsonJohn Pickard<b>Objective</b> ‐ This paper examines the role of a health information professional in a large multidisciplinary project to improve services for head injury.<br><b>Methods</b> ‐ An action research approach was taken, with the information professional acting as co‐ordinator. Change management processes were guided by theory and evidence. The health information professional was responsible for an ongoing literature review on knowledge management (clinical and political issues), data collection and analysis (from patient records), collating and comparing data (to help develop standards), and devising appropriate dissemination strategies.<br><b>Results</b> ‐ Important elements of the health information management role proved to be 1) co‐ordination; 2) setting up mechanisms for collaborative learning through information sharing; and 3) using the theoretical frameworks (identified from the literature review) to help guide implementation. The role that emerged here has some similarities to the informationist role that stresses domain knowledge, continuous learning and working in context (embedding). This project also emphasised the importance of co‐ordination, and the ability to work across traditional library information analysis (research literature discovery and appraisal) and information analysis of patient data sets (the information management role).<br><b>Conclusion</b> ‐ Experience with this project indicates that health information professionals will need to be prepared to work with patient record data and synthesis of that data, design systems to co‐ordinate patient data collection, as well as critically appraise external evidence.http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/7415/6963
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helen M. Seeley
Christine Urquhart
Peter Hutchinson
John Pickard
spellingShingle Helen M. Seeley
Christine Urquhart
Peter Hutchinson
John Pickard
Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research Setting
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
author_facet Helen M. Seeley
Christine Urquhart
Peter Hutchinson
John Pickard
author_sort Helen M. Seeley
title Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research Setting
title_short Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research Setting
title_full Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research Setting
title_fullStr Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research Setting
title_full_unstemmed Developing the Role of a Health Information Professional in a Clinical Research Setting
title_sort developing the role of a health information professional in a clinical research setting
publisher University of Alberta
series Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
issn 1715-720X
publishDate 2010-06-01
description <b>Objective</b> ‐ This paper examines the role of a health information professional in a large multidisciplinary project to improve services for head injury.<br><b>Methods</b> ‐ An action research approach was taken, with the information professional acting as co‐ordinator. Change management processes were guided by theory and evidence. The health information professional was responsible for an ongoing literature review on knowledge management (clinical and political issues), data collection and analysis (from patient records), collating and comparing data (to help develop standards), and devising appropriate dissemination strategies.<br><b>Results</b> ‐ Important elements of the health information management role proved to be 1) co‐ordination; 2) setting up mechanisms for collaborative learning through information sharing; and 3) using the theoretical frameworks (identified from the literature review) to help guide implementation. The role that emerged here has some similarities to the informationist role that stresses domain knowledge, continuous learning and working in context (embedding). This project also emphasised the importance of co‐ordination, and the ability to work across traditional library information analysis (research literature discovery and appraisal) and information analysis of patient data sets (the information management role).<br><b>Conclusion</b> ‐ Experience with this project indicates that health information professionals will need to be prepared to work with patient record data and synthesis of that data, design systems to co‐ordinate patient data collection, as well as critically appraise external evidence.
url http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/7415/6963
work_keys_str_mv AT helenmseeley developingtheroleofahealthinformationprofessionalinaclinicalresearchsetting
AT christineurquhart developingtheroleofahealthinformationprofessionalinaclinicalresearchsetting
AT peterhutchinson developingtheroleofahealthinformationprofessionalinaclinicalresearchsetting
AT johnpickard developingtheroleofahealthinformationprofessionalinaclinicalresearchsetting
_version_ 1716744274868961280