Some interesting, and not so interesting, issues relating to our work at TRIP Database Ltd.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Open Access Education Initiative
It uses open-source materials and a dispersed group of volunteer course developers, tutors and infrastructure support, to provide low-cost education for capacity building in Public Health. Over the past two years, it has been able to deliver an educational programme to those who cannot afford overseas student fees charged by most universities. The Peoples-uni has developed a set of course modules, which can be taken individually and used to gain a Certificate, Diploma (and soon a Masters) in Public Health.
Visit the site today (Peoples-uni) and learn much more.
Friday, April 23, 2010
TILT
- Why are you looking at this article?
- What did you learn from this article?
- How will you apply this in practice?
What we observed was how powerful and useful the middle answer tended to be. This was typically a clinician giving their account of the learning they had undertaken from reading the article. It struck us how powerful this information would be if shared.
TILT allows a user to record any learning they have undertaken (not restricted to TRIP articles). It might be any article they've read, a conversation with a colleague - any clinical learning. This is then recorded as a learning log. But the real beauty is that this learning can be shared with other users. In other words, they can learn from your learning and vice versa. Already, after just 3 days and around 10 recorded 'learnings' two clinicians have already learnt from others contributions.
Currently, this is a proof of concept model and at the end of the testing period (4-6 weeks) we'll try and get a feel for the 'worth' of the model and make a decision on whether to take it forward or not.
If you'd like to get involved let us know via jon.brassey@tripdatabase.com
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Liability and the health librarian
Essential reading.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
8,000 users
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Aardvark
I'd love this sort of service on TRIP and we could launch something similar. However, for this to work well we need to have a good idea where people's expertise lies. Currently, the only details we consistently have on users is what their broad area of interest are (e.g. cardiology, oncology). If there are 100 questions covering cardiology topics - what's the best way of getting them sent to people who may know the answer? If I had some expertise in, say, stable angina I would find it very off-putting to be asked to help answer questions on cholesterol, stroke, hypertension etc. What would be much better would be to send the user only questions relating to stable angina.
So, to do this requires some sort of profiling. In other words recording and trying to understand a user's habits on TRIP and making assumptions based on their search terms, click-throughs etc. And, if we had a decent profile, as well as forwarding appropriate questions to them (assuming they'd be predisposed to answering them) we could arguably push new research, conferences, even jobs of interest.
It's a big task to undertake and requires users to consistently login (to help assign behaviours to an individuals profile). However, I think it's well worth the effort.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
TRIP on Facebook
We've currently got 233 'fans' (a term I dislike in this context) and we're having conversations all the time. I suppose, as I've said before, it's another medium to reach out and 'meet' our users and to hear what they want.
If you're not signed up already - go and visit and become a 'fan' today.
Thursday, April 08, 2010
Open access
The article is a good introduction to the topic so I recommend you read it.
TRIP thrives on linking to high quality open access content but we need to embrace it even more. I can't help thinking that auto-searching PubMed Central (not forgetting the UK equivalent) would be a good 'next step' for us.
But can we help in other ways? If you have any ideas, let us know.
Friday, April 02, 2010
TRIP Answers
- Re-designed homepage to make it more dynamic.
- Simplified the look and feel of each answer.
- Introduced a 'related articles' panel which pulls back articles from the main TRIP Database which are similar to the actual Q&A. This is especially useful for older Q&As as it helps to show if there is any new research.
- Significantly improved the search, it now uses the same system as found on the TRIP Database.
Lots of other smaller changes to improve the site.
Go take a look and let us know what you think.