Start Date
6-10-2021 11:35 AM
End Date
6-10-2021 11:45 AM
Type of Work
Presentation
Description
Objective: This paper describes the experience of three librarians from different institutions working together on a national guideline, the benefits of that collaboration, a suggested approach and the questions that should be asked beforehand to ensure the experience is efficient and the guideline is of the highest quality.
Methods: Participating in guidelines is challenging because of the need to balance best practices, time constraints, and researchers' needs. Most clinical guidelines include faculty authors from multiple institutions. When a librarian is invited to join a guideline development team, often times the librarian's role is poorly defined. Before agreeing to participate in a national guideline, librarians should consider authorship versus acknowledgment, time commitment, number and complexity of clinical questions, project management, research team support, team experience with guideline development, and cross-institutional librarian collaboration.
Results: Collaborating with librarians from other institutions has many benefits: the burden of completing search strategies is shared; librarian partners can serve as a sounding board for problem-solving; opportunities are provided for librarians to learn new skills, databases, and technology not subscribed to by their own institutions; and peer review improves the quality of the searches, thus ensuring the highest quality guidelines. Lastly, involving more librarians strengthens relationships between librarians and faculty from their own institutions which could lead to other opportunities.
Conclusions: When participating in a national guideline, librarians should ask for authorship, be realistic about the time commitment, confirm details of research questions, gauge team experience with guideline development, discuss project management, obtain research team support, and finally, engage in cross-institutional librarian collaboration.
Included in
Health Sciences and Medical Librarianship Commons, Scholarly Communication Commons, Scholarly Publishing Commons
Librarian Collaboration in Guideline Development
Objective: This paper describes the experience of three librarians from different institutions working together on a national guideline, the benefits of that collaboration, a suggested approach and the questions that should be asked beforehand to ensure the experience is efficient and the guideline is of the highest quality.
Methods: Participating in guidelines is challenging because of the need to balance best practices, time constraints, and researchers' needs. Most clinical guidelines include faculty authors from multiple institutions. When a librarian is invited to join a guideline development team, often times the librarian's role is poorly defined. Before agreeing to participate in a national guideline, librarians should consider authorship versus acknowledgment, time commitment, number and complexity of clinical questions, project management, research team support, team experience with guideline development, and cross-institutional librarian collaboration.
Results: Collaborating with librarians from other institutions has many benefits: the burden of completing search strategies is shared; librarian partners can serve as a sounding board for problem-solving; opportunities are provided for librarians to learn new skills, databases, and technology not subscribed to by their own institutions; and peer review improves the quality of the searches, thus ensuring the highest quality guidelines. Lastly, involving more librarians strengthens relationships between librarians and faculty from their own institutions which could lead to other opportunities.
Conclusions: When participating in a national guideline, librarians should ask for authorship, be realistic about the time commitment, confirm details of research questions, gauge team experience with guideline development, discuss project management, obtain research team support, and finally, engage in cross-institutional librarian collaboration.