AWARENESS & UTILIZATION OF ELECTRONIC INFORMATION RESOURCES AMONG MEDICAL STUDENTS
Keywords:
Medical institute, libraries, E-resources, search engines, nternetAbstract
Objective: The main objective of this research study is to find out the awareness and utilization of electronic resources by the KMC students.
Material and Methods: The total number of students in the KMC is 1484 who are enrolled in MBBS program. A random sample of 150 students from various programs of Basic Sciences and Clinical Sciences was selected.
Results: Results shows that 74 % of total population studied was males and only 26% of total were females, who can use internet and e-resources for different purposes. The majority of medical students, i.e. 121 (93 %) have access to computers but whereas a few of the respondents, i.e. 09 (7%) are not having access to computer. Computer literacy that majority of the medical students, i.e. 46 (35.5%) are enough to do their work on computer, similarly 35 (27.0%) of the respondents are good, 30 (23.0%) of the respondents are very good and 12 (9.0%) of the respondents to excellent, However a very less number of medical students i.e. 07(5.5%) have poor computer skills. Access to Internet that the majority i.e. 117 (90%) of respondents have access to internet, while only 13(10.0%) of the respondents has no access to internet. The majority of respondents under observation i.e. 48 (37.0%) are spent 1-2 hour on internet, 28(21.5%) of respondents spend less than 1 hour and 2-3 hour respectively, while 16(12.0%) of respondents spend more than 4 hours and only 10(8.0%) of the total respondents spend 3-4 hour on internet daily. The majority 116 (89.0%) of the study participants use the search engines to retrieve information they need for their study to quench the trust of knowledge,
while only 14(11.0%) of the respondents not use the search engines. The result shows that 24% of the Khyber Medical College are mostly using the British Medical Journals database for their study, Similarly 22% of respondents are using Pub-Med Journals, 19% of the respondents are using Journal of American Medical Association, 17% of the respondents use New England Journal of Medicine, 5% of the respondents are use Springer-Link database, 5% of the respondents are use Wily-Blackwell Journal, 4% of respondents use Ebrary, and the lowest 4%, of the respondents use Taylor & Francis Journal.
Conclusion: The library should start regular orientation program for the newly admitted MBBS students, this will increase
the usage of electronic resources.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
All articles published in the Journal of Medical Sciences (JMS) are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0). Under the CC BY 4.0 license, author(s) retain the ownership of the copyright publishing rights without restrictions for their content, and allow others to copy, use, print, share, modify, and distribute the content of the article even for commercial purposes as long as the original authors and the journal are properly cited. No permission is required from the author/s or the publishers for this purpose. Appropriate attribution can be provided by simply citing the original article. The corresponding author has the right to grant on behalf of all authors, a worldwide license to JMS and its licensees in all forms, formats, and media (whether known now or created in the future), The corresponding author must certify and warrant the authorship and proprietorship and should declare that he/she has not granted or assigned any of the article’s rights to any other person or body.
The corresponding author must compensate the journal for any costs, expenses, or damages that the JMS may incur as a result of any breach of these warranties including any intentional or unintentional errors, omissions, copyright issues, or plagiarism. The editorial office must be notified upon submission if an article contains materials like text, pictures, tables, or graphs from other copyrighted sources. The JMS reserves the right to remove any images, figures, tables, or other content, from any article, whether before or after publication, if concerns are raised about copyright, license, or permissions and the authors are unable to provide documentation confirming that appropriate permissions were obtained for publication of the content in question.

