Available Until 4/30/2026

CHIS on demand Module 3: Knowledge of Subject Matter and Resources

For more information or to schedule this course, please contact the NNLM Training Office at nto@utah.edu . 

This class is designed for anyone interested in providing consumer health information to their community, with a focus on libraries and information centers. The goal of this class is to allows learners to earn up to 5 continuing education credit hours towards the Level 1 Consumer Health Information Specialization (CHIS) from the Medical Library Association. 5 separate modules cover each Level 1 CHIS competency:

  1. Know the Community
  2. Know the Health Consumer 
  3. Knowledge of Subject Matter and Resources 
  4. Evaluation of Health Information 
  5. Communication, Reference, and Instruction 

Modules can be completed in any order.

Each Module takes about 1 hour to complete and includes a reading and a knowledge check. 

This class is provided entirely online and self-paced through the Moodle learning management system.

Resource URLhttps://nnlm.gov/chis-on-demand (Opens June 1, 2022) 

Learning Objectives

Through books and knowledge checks, learners will

  1. Learn about the Consumer Health Information Specialization
  2. Identify resources to identify characteristics of their community
  3. Identify issues, barriers and the library's role in providing medical information to health consumers
  4. Identify MedlinePlus, PubMed, Clinical Trials and other NLM resources as sources for health information
  5. List simple criteria to evaluate online health information
  6. List 3 communication techniques and 2 ways to protect patron privacy during a health reference interview.

Agenda

Module 3: Knowledge of Subject Matter and Resources

By reading a book, taking a quiz, and completing a poll you will be able to...

  • Identify MedlinePlus as a resource for health topics, drug, and genetics information written in plain language for general audiences in English and Spanish.
  • Identify PubMed as a database of citations to biomedical journal articles.
  • Identify ClnicalTrials.gov as a registry of clinical studies and repository of results.
  • Identify DailyMed, MedlinePlus, and PubChem as resources for drug and chemical information
  • List 3 or more training options where you could learn more about MedlinePlus, PubMed,  ClinicalTrials.gov, or drug resources from NLM

Activities 

  • Reading
  • Quiz
  • Poll - What will do you next?

MLA CE Credits: 1