Use of the Internet as a searching tool by family doctors that worked in Antioquia ́s institutions during 2014: exploratory study
Main Article Content
Abstract
We described the use of Internet as a searching tool by family doctors that worked in Antioquia’s institutions during the second semester of 2014. In this descriptive, exploratory study, we surveyed anonymously 40 family doctors volunteers. We found that 97.5 % of the surveyed doctors used Internet, and 90% used it every day. 27.5 % of the sample did not have access to Internet at work while 72.5 % did. Searching for professional (medical) and leisure answers were the most common use (52.5 %), and 72.5 % considered that Internet improved their professional experience. The use of Internet has spread to all professional disciplines and is very frequent that the family doctors use this tool; it uses are very promising in this area, although more specific training in searching techniques and reliable sources of information are required.
Downloads
Article Details
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Those authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
The designated authors will retain copyright of all papers and grant the journal the right of first publication of their work, which will be simultaneously published under the Creative Commons Attribution License that allows third parties to share the work, as long as its author is attributed and this journal is identified as the original publisher.
Authors may enter into separate, additional non-exclusive licensing agreements for the distribution of the published work (e.g., post it to an institutional telematic archive or publish it in a monographic volume) as long as this journal is acknowledged as the original publisher.
References
Alghamdi, K.M. (2009). Professional use of the internet among Saudi Arabian dermatologists: a cross-sectional survey. BMC dermatology, 9(1), 10.
Demirdjian, G. (2001). Medicina basada en la evidencia. Arch. argent. pediatr, 99(4), 366-371.
Dobrev, A., Haesner, M., Hüsing, T., Korte, W.B., & Meyer, I. (2008). Benchmarking ICT use among general practitioners in Europe: final report. Bonn, Germany: Empirica.
Eberhart-Phillips, J., Hall, K., Herbison, G.P., Jenkins, S., Lambert, J., Ng, R., Nicholson, M. & Rankin, L. (2000). Internet use amongst New Zealand general practitioners. The New Zealand Medical Journal, 113(1108), 135-137.
Gómez V., Latour J., Añón J., Palencia E., Díaz R. & Lucas García, N. (2006). Uso de internet y recursos electrónicos entre médicos intensivistas españoles. Primera encuesta nacional. Med. Intensiva, 30(6), 249-259.
Guyatt, G., Cairns, J., Churchill, D., Cook, D., Haynes, B., Hirsh et al. (1992). Evidence-based medicine: a new approach to teaching the practice of medicine. Jama, 268(17), 2420-2425.
Koller, M., Grutter, R., Peltenburg, M., Fischer, J.E. & Steurer, J. (2001). Use of the Internet by medical doctors in Switzerland. Swiss Medical Weekly, 131(17-18), 251.
López, M. & Robledo, I.A. (2004). Una nueva sección: Revisiones Cochrane. Med Intensiva, 28(6), 299-300.
Marín, V., Valverde, J., Sánchez, I., Sáenz del Castillo, M., Polentinos, E. et al. (2013). Internet como fuente de información sobre salud en pacientes de atención primaria y su influencia en la relación médico-paciente. Atención Primaria 45(1), 46–53. doi: 10.1016/j.aprim.2012.09.004
Muñoz Guajardo, I. & Salas Valero, M. (2012). Cómo buscar (y encontrar) evidencia científica en salud: La búsqueda en Medline a través de Pubmed. Nure Investigación, 9(56), 1-13.
Romano, M., Gesualdo, F., Pandolfi, E., Tozzi, A.E. & Ugazio, A.G. (2012). Use of the internet by Italian pediatricians: habits, impact on clinical practice and expectations. BMC Med Inform Decis Mak, (12), 23. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-12-23.