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

Author:

Lloyd Jennifer K.ORCID,Alpi Kristine M.ORCID,Hoogland Margaret A.ORCID,Stephenson Priscilla L.ORCID,Meyer Elizabeth

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.

Publisher

University Library System, University of Pittsburgh

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Health Informatics

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. University students' satisfaction with library services and resources using the Kano model;International Journal of ADVANCED AND APPLIED SCIENCES;2024-05

2. The Changing Face of Public Services in Health Sciences Libraries Post-Pandemic;Medical Reference Services Quarterly;2024-04-02

3. Virtual Reference at Health Sciences Libraries in the Time of COVID-19;Medical Reference Services Quarterly;2023-07-03

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