Evidence-based medicine at the intersection of research interests
between academic health sciences librarians and medical
educators: a review of the literature
posted on 2013-12-03, 00:00authored byJosephine L. Dorsch, Gerald (Jerry) Perry
Objectives: In 2008, the Association of Academic
Health Sciences Libraries established an Education
Research Task Force (ERTF) to plan research
addressing research priorities outlined in key
Association of American Medical Colleges reports.
ERTF members conducted a literature review to
describe the state of collaborative research at the
intersection of medical education and health sciences
librarianship. Analysis of initial results revealed
instruction in evidence-based medicine (EBM) was a
shared interest and is thus the focus of this review.
Methods: Searches on EBM teaching programs were
conducted, and results were posted to a shared online
citation management service. Individual articles were
assessed and assigned metadata describing subject
matter, scope, and format.
Results: Article analysis identified key themes. Most
papers were descriptive narratives of curricular
development. Evaluation studies were also prominent
and often based on student satisfaction or selfreported
competency. A smaller number of controlled
studies provide evidence of impacts of librarian
involvement in EBM instruction.
Conclusions: Scholarship of EBM instruction is of
common interest between medical educators and
health sciences librarians. Coauthorship between the
groups and distribution of literature points to a
productive collaboration. An emerging literature of
controlled studies measuring the impact of crossdisciplinary
efforts signals continued progress in the
arena of EBM instruction.