Interlibrary loan and document delivery in North American health sciences libraries during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q1 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
Jennifer K Lloyd, Kristine M Alpi, Margaret A Hoogland, Priscilla L Stephenson, Elizabeth Meyer
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Objective: The study purpose was to understand how early months of the COVID-19 pandemic altered interlibrary loan (ILL) and document delivery (DD) in North American health science libraries (HSLs), specifically the decision-making and workflow adjustments associated with accessing their own collections and obtaining content not available via ILL.

Methods: Researchers distributed an online 26-question survey through 24 health science library email lists from January 6-February 7, 2021. Respondents reported their library's ILL and DD activities from March-August 2020, including ILL/DD usage and policies, collection access, decision-making, and workflow adjustments. In addition to calculating frequencies, cross-tabulation and statistical tests were performed to test a priori potential associations. Two researchers independently and thematically analyzed responses to the 2 open-ended questions and reached consensus on themes.

Results: Hospital libraries represented 52% (n=226/431) of respondents, along with 42% academic (n=179) and 6% (n=26) multi-type or other special. Only 1% (n=5) closed completely with no remote services, but many, 45% (n=194), ceased ILL of print materials. More than half (n=246/423; 58%) agreed that ILL requests likely to be filled from print remained unfilled more than is typical. Open-ended questions yielded 5 themes on ILL/DD staffing, setup, and systems; 6 on impacts for libraries and library users.

Conclusion: Lack of communication regarding collection availability and staffing resulted in delayed or unfilled requests. Hospital and academic libraries made similar decisions about continuing services but reported different experiences in areas such as purchasing digital content. Hybrid ILL/DD workflows may continue for managing these services.

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在COVID-19大流行的最初几个月,北美卫生科学图书馆的馆际互借和文件传递。
目的:研究目的是了解COVID-19大流行的最初几个月如何改变北美卫生科学图书馆(hsl)的馆际互借(ILL)和文献传递(DD),特别是与访问自己的馆藏和获取无法通过ILL获得的内容相关的决策和工作流程调整。方法:研究人员于2021年1月6日至2月7日通过24个健康科学图书馆的电子邮件列表分发了一份包含26个问题的在线调查。受访者报告了2020年3月至8月图书馆的ILL/DD活动,包括ILL/DD使用和政策、馆藏访问、决策和工作流程调整。除了计算频率外,还进行了交叉制表和统计检验,以检验先验的潜在关联。两位研究人员独立地分析了对两个开放式问题的回答,并就主题达成了共识。结果:医院图书馆占受访者总数的52% (n=226/431),学术图书馆占42% (n=179),多类型或其他特殊图书馆占6% (n=26)。只有1% (n=5)完全关闭,没有远程服务,但许多(45%)(n=194)停止了印刷材料的ILL。超过一半(n=246/423;58%)同意可能从打印中填写的ILL请求未填写的情况比典型情况更多。开放式问题产生了关于ILL/DD人员配置、设置和系统的5个主题;对图书馆及图书馆使用者的影响。结论:缺乏关于收集可用性和人员配置的沟通导致延迟或未完成的请求。医院和学术图书馆在继续提供服务方面做出了类似的决定,但在购买数字内容等方面报告了不同的经验。混合ILL/DD工作流可以继续用于管理这些服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of the Medical Library Association
Journal of the Medical Library Association INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
10.00%
发文量
39
审稿时长
26 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the Medical Library Association (JMLA) is an international, peer-reviewed journal published quarterly that aims to advance the practice and research knowledgebase of health sciences librarianship. The most current impact factor for the JMLA (from the 2007 edition of Journal Citation Reports) is 1.392.
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