Mar 4, 2008
By Andrea Lynn
Hunting for health information on the Web isn't always good for your health.
All of the backtracking, detours and dead ends required of an inquiring mind in hot pursuit
on the information superhighway can lead to frustration and perhaps even a little "road" rage.
Understanding the potholes and other problems,
librarians at the University of Illinois have built a
site that will allow users to bypass most Web-related symptoms: a single route to the best, most
up-to-date health news available online.
The new
Health Information Portal brings together health
information from many disciplines and sources, making them available in one convenient,
easy-to-access place.
"What we've tried to do is pull out some of the best health information sources from the vast
body that is available free via the Internet," said Mary Beth Allen, the applied health sciences
librarian at Illinois who coordinated the project.
"For example, the biomedical database, PubMed, and its consumer-oriented counterpart,
MedlinePlus, are both excellent sources of information, and both are available free to any one with
net access," Allen said. "Most of the sources in the portal's ‘YOUR Health' and ‘Salud en Espanol'
sections also are free to anyone with net access."
Subject guide links are provided for more than 30 health specialties, including aging,
alternative medicine, genetics, medical imaging, oncology, substance abuse, toxicology and even
veterinary medicine.
According to Allen, the portal was designed to be useful for "anyone with a
health-related question or concern" - from students and researchers to community members.
The project involved the collaboration of 13 campus librarians and three graduate assistants.
Their goal was to create "a more visible entryway to interdisciplinary health information."
"Health research is extremely interdisciplinary and the application of that research is far
reaching," Allen said. "Bringing electronic health information resources together in one place
offers a single starting place that supports basic, applied and translational research activities
on campus."
From the new site, researchers can find specialist librarians and more specialized
information at campus libraries, in books, databases, journals and other resources.
The new site features:
The site is maintained by the subject specialist librarians who are named on the site as
contacts for each of the subjects.
The librarians who collaborated to build the portal are Pat Allen and Laura Hanson,
Funk ACES Library; Melody Allison and Diane Schmidt,
Biology Library; Nelly Gonzalez,
Latin American and Caribbean Library; JoAnn Jacoby
and Allison Sutton,
Education and Social Science Library; Lori Mestre,
Library Digital Learning; Katie Newman,
Biotechnology Library; Mary Shultz,
UIC Library of the Health Sciences, Urbana; Nikki
Wright,
Grainger Engineering Library; and Greg Youngen,
Veterinary Medicine Library.
Anna Dombrowski, a student in Illinois'
Graduate School of Library and Information Science
(GSLIS), is doing the site's Web editing and preparing for its move to the Library's
content-management system. Tabatha Becker and Erin Miller, two former GSLIS students, now
librarians, were instrumental in the design and initial organizational work.
The site went up last fall, even though the librarians were adding content and working out
bugs. Without advertising, the site was visited about 300 times in January.
"The project really started to fly when JoAnn Jacoby, from the Education and Social Science
Library, discovered Tabatha Becker, who was interested in doing an independent study project on Web
page design and usability testing, a perfect match for development of the health information portal
idea," Allen said.
"We had Web accessibility and usability in mind from the beginning, and the Health
Information Portal grew from there," she said.
"We are a public library, so any community member can come in to the Library and use our
workstations to search all of our subscription-based services and gain access to full text, and we
encourage the community to make use of the resources we provide," Allen said. "From their own
public libraries, members of the community also can request an interlibrary loan of material that
isn't otherwise available."
Allen believes that the new portal will be a valuable resource for students in the
university's new Health Professions Living-Learning Community, housed in Oglesby Hall.
The University Library seeks input from users to make the portal more useful.
"I expect the portal will continue to evolve as we receive feedback," Allen said.
News item by Andrea Lynn, Humanities Editor, U of I News Bureau, originally published at the following URL:
http://www.news.uiuc.edu/news/08/0304health.html
Do you have a story you'd like added to the Library News & Events? If so, please contact Heather Murphy (hmurphy@illinois.edu).