Question: Can a mobile optimized subject guide facilitate medical student access to mobile point-ofcare tools? Setting: The guide was created at a library at a research-intensive university with six teaching hospital sites. Objectives: The team created a guide facilitating medical student access to point-of-care tools directly on mobile devices to provide information allowing them to access and set up resources with little assistance. Methods: Two librarians designed a mobile optimized subject guide for medicine and conducted a survey to test its usefulness. Results: Web analytics and survey results demonstrate that the guide is used and the students are satisfied. Conclusion: The library will continue to use the subject guide as its primar...
Mobile Web browsing is becoming increasingly pervasive, especially among younger Web users. In order...
Given recent advances in mobile technologies, there has been a shift from e-learning to mobile learn...
Background: Ingrained assumptions about clinical placements (clerkships) for health professions stud...
Objectives : This article describes a project which explored the potential for mobile technologies t...
Objectives: To evaluate the perceived benefits of access to library-licensed mobile clinical decisio...
This systematic review examines types of mobile devices used by health professions students, kinds o...
Purpose: Investigate the suitability of mobile devices to deliver drug information content to 4th, 5...
This systematic review examines types of mobile devices used by health professions students, kinds o...
In response to frequent use of mobile devices among medical students, Dana Medical Library at the Un...
In spring 2010, the staff of Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library met to discuss ideas for a mobile we...
Objective: To examine how Canadian academic medical libraries are supporting mobile apps, what apps ...
Purpose: Investigate the suitability of mobile devices to deliver drug information content to 4th, ...
In anticipation of the release of a mobile VPN to access the George Washington University wireless n...
INTRODUCTION: Recently, the faculty from the Department of Family Medicine in conjunction with the ...
This article addresses the planning, implementation, and recommendations of one medical library in r...
Mobile Web browsing is becoming increasingly pervasive, especially among younger Web users. In order...
Given recent advances in mobile technologies, there has been a shift from e-learning to mobile learn...
Background: Ingrained assumptions about clinical placements (clerkships) for health professions stud...
Objectives : This article describes a project which explored the potential for mobile technologies t...
Objectives: To evaluate the perceived benefits of access to library-licensed mobile clinical decisio...
This systematic review examines types of mobile devices used by health professions students, kinds o...
Purpose: Investigate the suitability of mobile devices to deliver drug information content to 4th, 5...
This systematic review examines types of mobile devices used by health professions students, kinds o...
In response to frequent use of mobile devices among medical students, Dana Medical Library at the Un...
In spring 2010, the staff of Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library met to discuss ideas for a mobile we...
Objective: To examine how Canadian academic medical libraries are supporting mobile apps, what apps ...
Purpose: Investigate the suitability of mobile devices to deliver drug information content to 4th, ...
In anticipation of the release of a mobile VPN to access the George Washington University wireless n...
INTRODUCTION: Recently, the faculty from the Department of Family Medicine in conjunction with the ...
This article addresses the planning, implementation, and recommendations of one medical library in r...
Mobile Web browsing is becoming increasingly pervasive, especially among younger Web users. In order...
Given recent advances in mobile technologies, there has been a shift from e-learning to mobile learn...
Background: Ingrained assumptions about clinical placements (clerkships) for health professions stud...