This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

A new report commissioned by Health Education England suggests that specialist library services are freeing up the time of clinicians, enabling them to devote more hours to patient care.
HEE says that the services could be saving the NHS as much as £77 million a year, and, if the ratio of librarians to health professionals was increased to the level recommended by HEE, it’s thought that figure could rise to as much as £106 million.
Health librarians and knowledge specialists make the gathering of information as easy as possible for healthcare professionals, relieving the burden of sourcing and making sense of evidence. This helps NHS organisations meet their statutory duty to use evidence from research within the service.
Library and knowledge services are usually based within trusts and teaching hospitals, providing digital knowledge resources and information services as well as physical walk-in libraries, with staff on hand to research queries for clinicians.
Increasingly, librarians are embedded within clinical teams accompanying doctors and nurses on ward rounds, ready to source information about conditions and treatments instantly online.
Patrick Mitchell, director of Innovation and Transformation, Health Education England, said: “This report gives us some truly great insight into the value that embedded NHS Library and Knowledge Services bring to staff at all levels of the healthcare system when planning and delivering care for local people.
“Librarians are probably not the first role that spring to mind when people think about the NHS. However, the part they play, and the specialist expertise they provide, give clinicians some of the most important tools they have to treat patients effectively – information, and time. All the evidence shows that the right knowledge services improve outcomes for patients.”
The report has been launched at the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Libraries this week.
This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
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