Title
Perceived barriers to information access among medical residents in Iran: obstacles to answering clinical queries in settings with limited Internet accessibility.
Abstract
Studies performed in the US and other Western countries have documented that physicians generate many clinical questions during a typical day and rely on various information sources for answers. Little is known about the information seeking behaviors of physicians practicing in other countries, particularly those with limited Internet connectivity. We conducted this study to document the perceived barriers to information resources used by medical residents in Iran. Our findings reveal that different perceived barriers exist for electronic versus paper-based resources. Notably, paper-based resources are perceived to be limited by resident time-constraints and availability of resources, whereas electronic resources are limited by cost decentralized resources (such as PDAs) and accessibility of centralized, Internet access. These findings add to the limited literature regarding health information-seeking activities in international healthcare settings, particularly those with limited Internet connectivity, and will supplement future studies of and interventions in such settings.
Year
Venue
Field
2007
AMIA
Information system,Health care,Psychological intervention,Internet privacy,Information seeking,Information access,Knowledge management,Internet access,Health informatics,Medicine,The Internet
DocType
ISSN
Citations 
Conference
1942-597X
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Danesh Mazloomdoost100.34
Shervineh Mehregan200.34
Hilda Mahmoudi300.34
Akbar Soltani400.34
Peter J Embi521530.87