Showing posts with label Anthea Sutton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthea Sutton. Show all posts

Monday, 31 October 2016

ScHARR Information Resources Group at ISPOR European Congress

Image credit: Viennascape by Nic Piégsa
. This work is licensed under a CC BY 2.0 license.

This week, ScHARR Information Resources Group will be represented at the ISPOR 19th European Annual Congress by Suzy Paisley (Director of Innovation and Knowledge Transfer) and Anthea Sutton (Information Resources Group Manager).

Along with other members of the HEDS team, Suzy and Anthea are contributing to the busy conference programme with a poster presentation each.  Suzy on the topic of "Identifying Early Biomarkers of Acute Myocardial Infarction in the Biomedical Literature: A Comparison of Text Mining and Manual Sifting Techniques".  Anthea will be representing the Systematic Review Toolbox, in collaboration with Chris Marshall from YHEC.  Both posters can be viewed between the hours of 08:45 and 14:15 on Monday 31st October, with an author discussion hour at 13.15, do come along and find out about this work.

For the remainder of the congress, Suzy and Anthea can be found, along with the rest of the HEDS expert team, at exhibition Stand no. 20/21.  This provides a great opportunity to find out about opportunities to work with ScHARR to support key strategic developments in your organisation, to collaborate with us on research and to participate in our diverse, world class learning and teaching programmes.

The full ScHARR HEDS congress activity can be found here. We'll be tweeting from @ScHARR_IKT during the congress, so please follow us there.

Tuesday, 20 September 2016

Transforming your service: the right evidence at the right time and place: Virtual Issue of HILJ edited by Anthea Sutton


To mark the 2016 Health Libraries Group (HLG) Conference, Health Information and Libraries Journal (HILJ) has published a virtual issue on the topic of “Transforming your service: the right evidence at the right time and place”. The virtual issue, edited by Anthea Sutton, contains articles and features published in HILJ in the past two years (2014-2016), on the theme of service transformation, and the related key strategic themes outlined in Knowledge for Healthcare (KFH).
The selected articles and features all demonstrate initiatives in health care library and knowledge services in line with these strategic themes, including optimising investment,quick and easy access to relevant evidence, and planning and development of the knowledge service workforce. The virtual issue aims to give an overview of KFH, highlighting examples of good practice and complementing the presentations and discussions at HLG 2016.
The 2016 HILJ Virtual issue is freely available online, and includes a video abstract.
This post originally appeared on the Knowledge for Healthcare blog and has been reproduced with permission.

Wednesday, 29 June 2016

Two new books from Information Resources

Books are like buses, you wait ages for one to come along and two come at the same time, or something like that. This is the case in Information Resources as Andy Tattersall  his and colleague Anthea Sutton alongside fellow ScHARR library and information guru Andrew Booth have published books.
Anthea and Andrew's book, Systematic Approaches to a Successful Literature Review is a second edition of their popular book for Sage and an essential read for anyone wanting to conduct a high quality literature review. Fellow ScHARR colleague and previous member of Information Resources Diana Papaioannou also contributed to the title which came out this month. Whilst Andy has delivered an edited book for Facet that looks at Altmetrics and the potential for research and libraries.

Systematic Approaches to a Successful Literature Review

Showing you how to take a structured and organized approach to a wide range of literature review types, this book helps you to choose which approach is right for your research. Packed with constructive tools, examples, case studies and hands-on exercises, the book covers the full range of literature review techniques,
New to this edition:
· Full re-organization takes you step-by-step through the process from beginning to end

· New chapter showing you how to choose the right method for your project
· Practical guidance on integrating qualitative and quantitative data
· New coverage of rapid reviews
· Comprehensive inclusion of literature review tools, including concept analysis, scoping and mapping
With an emphasis on the practical skills, this guide is essential for any student or researcher needing to get from first steps to a successful literature review.

To purchase a copy
http://www.facetpublishing.co.uk/title.php?id=300105#.V3PvSRUrLcs
Altmetrics
A practical guide for librarians, researchers and academics

Whilst Andy Tattersall has published an edited book for Facet Books on the topic of altmetrics. The book also features a chapter from the ever busy Andrew Booth and fellow Information Resources member Claire Beecroft. There are also contributions from Euan Adie at Altmetric.com, Ben Showers who has published previously for Facet on the topic of bibliometrics, and a chapter from William Gunn at Mendeley.
The book also came out this month and hopes to bridge the gap between practitioner and giving advice for library, information professionals and academics how they best make use of altmetrics. 
This book gives an overview of altmetrics, its tools and how to implement them successfully to boost and measure research outputs.

New methods of scholarly communication and dissemination of information are having a huge impact on how academics and researchers build profiles and share research. This groundbreaking and highly practical guide looks at the role that library and information professionals can play in facilitating these new ways of working and demonstrating impact and influence.
Altmetrics focuses on research artefact level metrics that are not exclusive to traditional journal papers but also extend to book chapters, posters and data sets, among other items. This book explains the theory behind altmetrics, including how it came about, why it can help academics and where it sits amongst current measurements of impact.

To purchase a copy
http://www.facetpublishing.co.uk/title.php?id=300105#.V3PvSRUrLcs

Thursday, 7 April 2016

Interview with Anthea Sutton

In the first of a new series of blog posts, we sat down with Anthea Sutton to find out more about her role as Information Resources Group Manager at ScHARR.


Anthea Sutton
Anthea Sutton
How did you start working in the library and information profession?

I did my undergraduate degree in English Literature and I was quite certain that I didn’t want to go into teaching even though lots of people kept saying to me “why don’t you be a teacher? You’d be a really good teacher!”. So I was trying to think of things that were using a fairly similar skill set and where there was some sort of element of imparting knowledge. While I was thinking about what I wanted to do a job came up in my local public library and I thought I’d give it a try and see if I liked it. I ended up really enjoying it and then started looking into how I could take that further. I applied to do a graduate trainee year at Manchester Metropolitan University in their big academic library and loved it, then did a masters in librarianship over at the Information School here at Sheffield.


Did you always want to work in the health sector?

It was just by happy coincidence really. I finished the masters and was very quickly wanting to find a job as I was fairly strapped for cash after a year of studying! I was quite open minded about what sector and location that I worked in, and it just so happened that the first job I applied for and got was here at ScHARR. It was a temporary post as a research assistant on a specific project that Information Resources were doing at the time, to do with evaluating NHS library services in the region. I did that for 8 months, really enjoyed it, thought it was a really good place to work, got really interested in the health information side of the library and information profession. Around the time my temporary job finished an Information Officer job came up at ScHARR, I applied for that, got it, and I’ve been here ever since. As I say it was a coincidence but I’m very happy with how things turned out as I think it's a really good profession to work in.


What sort of thing do you do on a typical day?

I’ve been thinking about this, it’s quite difficult to capture a typical day really. I think that’s probably true across Information Resources, I think we all have very varied roles and are involved in lots of different things.

For the Information Resources Management side of it one of the big things that I spend a lot of time doing is our workload planning for the group, so any work that comes in, I’m the main contact for that, and it's up to me to firstly find someone to do it, and secondly involvement in costing our work on projects. So that's one of the big things that can take up time in my day. I’m also still an information specialist, I’ve got my own projects that I work on, so literature searching and information management. I’ve always got some of that sort of work going on as well. I run a module on systematically reviewing literature so depending on the time of year I can be quite busy with that, with all the teaching and marking and all the things that are involved with running a module. Today I’ve been to an Open Access clinic that Andy ran, and I’ve also had a meeting about our CPD courses for library and information professionals. I don’t know that today is particularly typical, but that’s what I’ve been doing! It’s quite varied really, but I’d say they are the main things.


You mentioned a meeting about CPD courses for library and information professionals - does this mean there are plans for FOLIO?
FOLIO is a programme of online courses that we run for other LIS professionals, generally working in the health sector, but we have done broader things for other sectors as well. We’ve run a number of courses over a number of years. At the moment we are going to be running a course in collaboration with the Australian Library and Information Association, which is all about rapidly reviewing evidence. It’s aimed at LIS professionals who want to add value to their literature searching services by providing an evidence bulletin, so that they’ve done some kind of scanning and synthesis of the information and developed it into a product rather than just a list of references. We’ve run it in the UK previously, so we’re currently looking at the materials and making that changes we need to, both in terms of updating things, but also when we ran it in the UK we ran it for health LIS whereas in Australia it’s for a more general audience. So it’s anyone who might be doing that type of work, whatever sector they work in.


Can you tell us a bit about your work as reviews editor for the Health Information and Libraries Journal (HILJ)?

Every issue of HILJ has a review article. It can be any type of review article, sometimes it will be a full systematic review, sometimes it's an overview or literature review or sometimes we’ve had mapping reviews, and it’s my responsibility as the reviews editor to make sure that every issue has a review article in it. The role includes liaising with authors; if somebody is interested in writing a review article for HILJ they might contact me and discuss whether their topic is within the scope of the journal and they type of review they plan to do. Sometimes people just submit without a discussion but there is usually some sort of liaison with authors, even if it’s just in terms of time scale. Then once review articles have been submitted, it’s my responsibility to find people to peer review that article. Based on what the peer reviewers have said, and my own reading of the article, I would then make a recommendation to the editor as to whether it should be accepted, needs revisions, or sometimes articles are rejected for example if they are outside of the scope of the journal. So it’s quite a lot of liaising with various people but it’s a really interesting thing to be involved in. It’s a good journal and a really good editorial team. I enjoy it as an external type of work.


What do you like to do outside of work?

I’m quite a music fan so I try and see as much live music as I can, I also really like the theatre, particularly the Sheffield theatres, we get a lot of good stuff on. I like a good film. I’m in a book group, probably quite stereotypically for a librarian?! The rest of the time I spend walking my dog.

Do you have a hidden talent or party trick?

I managed to teach my dog how to do a high five which I was quite proud of. I can also whistle really loudly which is very useful for the aforementioned dog! 


Thank you to Anthea for agreeing to be our first interviewee. Look out for interviews with the rest of the lovely IR team in the future!

Thursday, 29 January 2015

Anthea Sutton and Andrew Booth win award from Journal of the European Association for Health Information and Libraries


Image © Mark Longair

You may remember at the end of last year, a post about an article written by Anthea Sutton and Andrew Booth on "The librarian as a leader: development of leadership in the library and information profession" published in the Journal of the European Association for Health Information and Libraries (JEAHIL). Well we're delighted to announce that said article has won an award for the second best paper published in JEAHIL in 2014. The award is a scholarship to attend the next EAHIL workshop, so Anthea will be heading to Edinburgh in June to join EAHIL for "Research-Minded: understanding, supporting, conducting research". We are very pleased to receive the award and thank the JEAHIL Editorial Board for the vote.

Tuesday, 23 December 2014

Anthea Sutton and Andrew Booth publish paper in JEAHIL



Before ScHARR Towers shuts up shop for the Christmas break, we bring you news of our latest IR publication. Anthea Sutton and Andrew Booth have published an article in the Journal of the European Association for Health Information and Libraries (JEAHIL) on the topic of leadership in the library and information profession. This contributes to a special themed issue on "The librarian of the future" and along with our article has some interesting features on hot topics such as open access and social media. Well worth a read!

Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Health Information and Libraries Journal and IR success!


Some great news relating to the writing activities of Information Resources Group here at ScHARR.  We were delighted to discover that 4 of our papers featured in the top 50 downloads from Health Information and Libraries Journal and 2 contributed to the 2012 Impact Factor:

Booth, A. and Beecroft, C. (2010), The SPECTRAL project: a training needs analysis for providers of clinical question answering services. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 27: 198–207.

Papaioannou, D., Sutton, A., Carroll, C., Booth, A. and Wong, R. (2010), Literature searching for social science systematic reviews: consideration of a range of search techniques. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 27: 114–122. 

Sutton, A. (2012), Increasing impact in a time of decreasing budgets [Editorial]. Health Information & Libraries Journal Virtual Issue 2012.

Sutton, A. and Booth, A. (2012), What type of leader am I?: a training needs analysis of health library and information managers. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 29: 39–46.

Sutton, A. and Grant, M. J. (2011), Cost-effective ways of delivering enquiry services: a rapid review. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 28: 249–255.

Woods, H. B. (2012), Know your RO from your AE? Learning styles in practice. Health Information & Libraries Journal, 29: 172–176. 




Wednesday, 24 October 2012

More of IR in action at Internet Librarian International



Following on from Andy & Claire's post about "Video Saved The Library Star", Anna and I are also hot-footing it to Internet Librarian International next week to present about


The session covers a pilot we ran in one of our FOLIOz e-learning courses to deliver the materials via a Web 2.0 technology of the participants choosing, allowing us to deliver real "anytime, anyplace" type learning.  We'll be reporting on how it went, what the learners thought, and what we plan to do next!


Tuesday, 3 July 2012

HILJ Virtual Issue 2012

Cover image for Vol. 29 Issue 2 

Health Information and Libraries Journal have published a free virtual issue of the journal.  Entitled "Increasing impact in a time of decreasing budgets", this virtual issue (VI) has been compiled to mark the CILIP Health Libraries Group Conference 2012. In line with the conference theme: ‘Health libraries under the microscope: perfecting your formula', the VI is a collection of 10 articles and regular features that have been published in Health Information and Libraries Journal in the last 2 years. The VI focuses specifically on the topics of impact, value and cost-effectiveness. All the articles and regular features contained in this VI are freely available online. 

Posted by Anthea

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

New book by ScHARR authors!

Need help with your literature review?  You know you're more than welcome to visit us in the library for one-to-one training but here's something you can take home and read at your leisure.  AND it's written by three of our esteemed colleagues at ScHARR, namely Andrew Booth, Diana Papaioannou and Anthea Sutton!


"Reviewing the literature is an essential part of every research project. This book takes you step-by-step through the process of approaching your literature review systematically, applying systematic principles to a wide range of literature review types. Through numerous examples, case studies and exercises, the book covers often neglected areas of literature review such as concept analysis, scoping and mapping." (SAGE)

If you're interested, it can be purchased at the very reasonable price of £22.99 (bargain!) or it can be borrowed from your favourite local library (1st floor, Regent Court) and is shelved at H 62 (Sys).  Go on.... you know you want to.

Posted by Sonia
Image by Amazon

Thursday, 2 June 2011

Using Web 2.0 for Health Information

Picture copyright of Facet publishing
Posted by Anthea

Forgive the blatant self-promotion, but you may be interested to know that Andrew Booth, Andy Tattersall, and myself (Anthea Sutton) have just contributed a chapter to the new book: Using Web 2.0 for Health Information, published by Facet. The book presents international case studies and reflections on using Web 2.0 in the health information field. Our chapter, entitled: Using Web 2.0 to facilitate staff development, focuses on the FOLIO programme of online courses designed and delivered by ScHARR IR Group to library and information professionals in the UK, Australia and New Zealand.

For further details of the book, please see the Facet website. Available from all good bookshops - both the online and the physical variety!

Thursday, 8 July 2010

Future Learningscapes Conference

Photo by golan
Posted by Anthea

I was at the University of Greenwich yesterday at the "Future Learningscapes: a 21st Century Challenge" conference, presenting a poster on "Employing Web 2.0 Tools to Deliver E-learning Across Hemispheres" on behalf of myself and my colleagues Andy Tattersall & Andrew Booth.



The poster is based on a case study of the FOLIOz e-learning courses ScHARR IR deliver to librarians in Australia and New Zealand in association with ALIA (Australian Library and Information Association).