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Health Care Resources on the Internet: A Guide for Librarians and Health Care Consumers
 
 
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Health Care Resources on the Internet: A Guide for Librarians and Health Care Consumers [Hardcover]

M. Wood (Editor)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0789006324 978-0789006325 November 12, 1999 1
Make Internet medical research simpler and more productive!

The rapid proliferation of Web sites makes finding medical information easy. Knowing when the information is accurate and reliable can be much more difficult. Health Care Resources on the Internet: A Guide for Librarians and Health Care Consumers discusses how to locate, evaluate, and use health care information available in online form.

As expectations shift from finding information in books to locating it on the World Wide Web, Health Care Resources on the Internet provides you with the skills you need. Whether you?re a first-time Internet user unfamiliar with search engines or an old hand at Boolean logic, you will find helpful search tips and strategies. Moreover, this comprehensive book offers specific advice on assessing the reliability of the information you find.

Health Care Resources on the Internet simplifies your hunt for information by recommending trustworthy Web sites. It covers topics including:

  • consumer and professional megasites for health care information
  • using Medline
  • searching for information on specific diseases
  • finding open clinical trials
  • consumer health information
  • alternative medicine

    Illustrated with tables and figures, Health Care Resources on the Internet is an essential guidebook for health-conscious consumers, information professionals, and medical professionals.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 205 pages
  • Publisher: CRC Press; 1 edition (November 12, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0789006324
  • ISBN-13: 978-0789006325
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,362,524 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some nuggets, but you have to dig for them., February 28, 2003
By 
Judith (Santa Cruz, CA USA) - See all my reviews
According to the subtitle, the audience for this book is librarians and "health care consumers," but according to the introduction, the audience is both of those and "health professionals," as well. Its stated purpose is to introduce readers to where and how to find health information on the Internet, including the Web, newsgroups and related resources.

The editor and nearly all of the chapter authors or co-authors are librarians by profession, most of them affiliated with universities, usually working in medical libraries.

HIGHLIGHTS

The most thorough and useful chapter is the one by helen-ann brown [sic] and Valerie G. Rankow on various free and fee-for-service or pay-per-view gateways to searching the National Library of Medicine's MEDLINE archives of medical journal articles. The co-authors include two tables that compare features and advantages of six free services that offer access to MEDLINE, plus info on four fee-based services.

These charts help readers choose which services may be preferable for their particular purposes. When the authors explain how to narrow a search to a specific focus or to stipulate search criteria (such as the prognosis for a disease), they include a sample search that explains their search strategy, lists the key words that strategy translates to in Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), and shows one search result as an example. This chapter is far more valuable for the reader's long-term benefit than the many other chapters that suggest starting at megasites or Web search engines, and then repeat the same site info throughout the book.

The chapters on statistical information and medical journals are also good, although some of this information is included in others chapters where the authors didn't stick to their assigned topics. For instance, the chapter on government resources for health information digresses too far into statistical information, especially since that's the topic of the chapter by different authors that follows.

LIMITATIONS

One gets the impression that the authors or co-authors weren't aware of what each chapter in the book would cover, or at least that there wasn't sufficient guidance, oversight or actual editing to prevent the considerable redundancy and poor organization of the information. Lack of developmental editing aside, the book apparently had neither a style guide nor a copy editor, judging by the hodgepodge of headings and subheadings and the difficulty of following the presentation in some of the chapters. Even the Web addresses (URLs) aren't written consistently.

Because of the inconsistencies, redundancies and confusing organization, it becomes too tedious to read the whole book thoroughly, so most readers are likely to end up skimming, thereby perhaps missing useful how-to tips. Keeping the how-to info at the beginning of each chapter, followed by lists of annotated citations that adhere to a consistent format would improve the readability and usefulness of this book.

The hardback version was published in 1999, followed by a paperback in 2000. As nearly every chapter states, information online - what exists and, certainly, where to find it - changes daily. At the least, both editions should have included a CD-ROM with live links to the sites mentioned in each chapter, or else aggregated both by category and alphabetically. Better yet, a companion Web site that is updated at least twice a year, even as a paid-subscription service, would be far more useful than a print-only book that can't help but be outdated before it's even off the press.

The editor and five of the 17 chapter authors or co-authors are librarians in Pennsylvania - five of them, including the author, at Pennsylvania State University; four others among the authors are librarians at the University of Minneapolis; the rest are at the University of Maryland (two), the University of Michigan, the New York City area or in Florida. All have good credentials, but the concentration at certain universities and in limited geographic areas is bothersome.

SUMMARY

Despite the drawbacks of the organization and format, even readers who are familiar with the Web and other Internet resources are likely to discover several Web sites, and services offered through certain sites, that they would not have known about and may never have found without this book. Just a couple of discoveries like that can be worth the price of the book, because they could save time and help in other ways continually thereafter.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended for school & public library staff., April 4, 2000
This guide for librarians and health care consumers discusses how to locate and search for health care information on the internet. Charts, figures and tables supplement details on specific web sites and their descriptions to help users both locate and evaluate health care sites.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
What is it like to be a reference librarian in the late twentieth century? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
metasearch gateways, quality health care information, quality citations, consumer health information, search statement, searching systems, metasearch engine, subject directories, pharmaceutical information
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
National Library of Medicine, New York, Mayo Clinic, Medical Matrix, Virtual Hospital, Hardin Meta Directory, Medical Library Association, Aries Knowledge Finder, Evidence-Based Medicine, Journal of the American Medical Association, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, University of Michigan, Northern Light, Nua Internet Surveys, University of Iowa, University of Pittsburgh, What's New, World Health Organization, Drug Abuse, Emory University, Federal Depository Library Program, Government Information Sources, Government Printing Office, Internet Public Library
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