A power information user (PIU) model to promote information integration in Tennessee's public health community

Observation and immersion in the user community are critical factors in designing and implementing informatics solutions; such practices ensure relevant interventions and promote user acceptance. Libraries can adapt these strategies to developing instruction and outreach. While needs assessment is t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Medical Library Association 2004-10, Vol.92 (4), p.459-464
Hauptverfasser: SATHE, Nila A, LET, Patricia, BETTINSOLI GIUSE, Nunzia
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container_issue 4
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container_title Journal of the Medical Library Association
container_volume 92
creator SATHE, Nila A
LET, Patricia
BETTINSOLI GIUSE, Nunzia
description Observation and immersion in the user community are critical factors in designing and implementing informatics solutions; such practices ensure relevant interventions and promote user acceptance. Libraries can adapt these strategies to developing instruction and outreach. While needs assessment is typically a core facet of library instruction, sustained, iterative assessment underlying the development of user-centered instruction is key to integrating resource use into the workflow. This paper describes the Eskind Biomedical Library's (EBL's) recent work with the Tennessee public health community to articulate a training model centered around developing power information users (PIUs). PIUs are community-based individuals with an advanced understanding of information seeking and resource use and are committed to championing information integration. As model development was informed by observation of PIU workflow and information needs, it also allowed for informal testing of the applicability of assessment via domain immersion in library outreach. Though the number of PIUs involved in the project was small, evaluation indicated that the model was useful for promoting information use in PIU workgroups and that the concept of domain immersion was relevant to library-related projects. Moreover, EBL continues to employ principles of domain understanding inherent in the PIU model to develop further interventions for the public health community and library users.
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source MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Access to Information
Community-Institutional Relations
Cooperative Behavior
Environmental health
Exact sciences and technology
Health care
Health Education - organization & administration
Health informatics
Humans
Information
Information and communication sciences
Information science. Documentation
Information service management
Information work
Inservice Training - organization & administration
Libraries
Libraries - organization & administration
Library and documentation centre management
Library Services - supply & distribution
Medicine
Models, Organizational
Power information user model
Sciences and techniques of general use
Tennessee
Time Factors
USA
User service management
title A power information user (PIU) model to promote information integration in Tennessee's public health community
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