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An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update

INTRODUCTION: Systematic reviews are a growing research methodology in the health sciences, and in other disciplines, having a significant impact on librarian workload. In a follow up to an earlier study, an environmental scan was conducted at Queen’s University to determine what has changed, if any...

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Autor principal: Ross-White, Amanda
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9327591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35949918
http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/jchla29517
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author Ross-White, Amanda
author_facet Ross-White, Amanda
author_sort Ross-White, Amanda
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description INTRODUCTION: Systematic reviews are a growing research methodology in the health sciences, and in other disciplines, having a significant impact on librarian workload. In a follow up to an earlier study, an environmental scan was conducted at Queen’s University to determine what has changed, if anything, since the introduction of a tiered service for knowledge synthesis by examining review publications where at least one co-author was from Queen’s University. METHODS: A search was conducted in PubMed and the Joanna Briggs database to find systematic reviews and meta-analyses with at least one author from Queen’s University for the five-year time since the last environmental scan. Reviews were categorized by the degree of involvement of the librarian(s) regardless of their institutional affiliation: librarian as co-author, librarian named in the acknowledgements, no known librarian involvement in the review. RESULTS: Of 453 systematic reviews published in the five-year time frame, nearly 20% (89) had a librarian named as co-author. A further 24.5% (110) acknowledged the role of a librarian in the search, either in the acknowledgements section or in the body of the text of the article. In just over half of reviews (235 or 51.8%) a librarian was either not involved, or was not explicitly acknowledged. More librarians and more institutions were represented in the period of 2016-2020 than in 2010-2015. CONCLUSION: In the five years since the last environmental scan, an increasing number of reviews recognized the role of the librarian in publishing systematic reviews, either through co-authorship or named acknowledgement. This also suggests that as more librarians have become involved in systematic reviews, librarian capacity for this work has increased compared to five years ago.
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spelling pubmed-93275912022-08-09 An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update Ross-White, Amanda J Can Health Libr Assoc Research Article / Article De Recherche INTRODUCTION: Systematic reviews are a growing research methodology in the health sciences, and in other disciplines, having a significant impact on librarian workload. In a follow up to an earlier study, an environmental scan was conducted at Queen’s University to determine what has changed, if anything, since the introduction of a tiered service for knowledge synthesis by examining review publications where at least one co-author was from Queen’s University. METHODS: A search was conducted in PubMed and the Joanna Briggs database to find systematic reviews and meta-analyses with at least one author from Queen’s University for the five-year time since the last environmental scan. Reviews were categorized by the degree of involvement of the librarian(s) regardless of their institutional affiliation: librarian as co-author, librarian named in the acknowledgements, no known librarian involvement in the review. RESULTS: Of 453 systematic reviews published in the five-year time frame, nearly 20% (89) had a librarian named as co-author. A further 24.5% (110) acknowledged the role of a librarian in the search, either in the acknowledgements section or in the body of the text of the article. In just over half of reviews (235 or 51.8%) a librarian was either not involved, or was not explicitly acknowledged. More librarians and more institutions were represented in the period of 2016-2020 than in 2010-2015. CONCLUSION: In the five years since the last environmental scan, an increasing number of reviews recognized the role of the librarian in publishing systematic reviews, either through co-authorship or named acknowledgement. This also suggests that as more librarians have become involved in systematic reviews, librarian capacity for this work has increased compared to five years ago. Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association 2021-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9327591/ /pubmed/35949918 http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/jchla29517 Text en © Ross-White https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Research Article / Article De Recherche
Ross-White, Amanda
An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update
title An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update
title_full An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update
title_fullStr An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update
title_full_unstemmed An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update
title_short An environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at Queen’s University: 2020 update
title_sort environmental scan of librarian involvement in systematic reviews at queen’s university: 2020 update
topic Research Article / Article De Recherche
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9327591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35949918
http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/jchla29517
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