Searching for the Best Solution
Rodney P. Lusk, MD, AAO-HNS/F President I would like to spend my last Bulletin article emphasizing the Academy’s developing technology and how we serve our membership. We know our website needs to be more useful to those we serve: this includes both the public and Academy members. The needs of these two groups are different. The most active page on the site is “find an ENT.” In fact, it is so popular that we are currently creating an app for this page that will allow anyone to find an otolaryngologist within a defined location. Prior to this year the website did not have a good site map and the pages had not been adequately meta-tagged and maintained. This is one of the reasons why your searches were not efficient. During the past year, all pages—more than 5,000, have been reviewed and evaluated for “currency” and relevancy by the Academy staff and committees. This has been an onerous task, but it is now completed. After assessing each page, the content was meta-tagged, or assigned key words, to improve your searches. A new search engine from Google has been implemented for more rapid and efficient searches using these newly created meta-tags. We are now working on the new site map. Our goal is to provide the public and our membership with the most efficient tools for searching all otolaryngology or ENT literature. This is no easy task as searches are now performed from multiple devices, such as smartphones, tablets, laptops, and desktop computers. The operating systems of these devices are different and difficult to maximize for each utilization. We know that to maximize your efficiency we will have to deliver the information to you through any device connected to the Internet, whenever you need it. We are making steady progress and you should try the new search capacity, the following features, and give us your feedback as it continues to improve. Let’s start with the annual meeting. You may have noticed the article in this year’s printed April Bulletin that you can track all papers, panels, and instruction courses by subspecialty at www.entnet.org/annual_meeting, which markedly improves your ability to find the educational materials of interest. This is a result of having the courses and papers properly meta-tagged just as the webpages are now tagged. The website now has an improved itinerary planner capable of searches by specialty, event time, day, presenter, and keywords. AcademyU® has a wealth of information that is online and free to the membership. It’s easy to use—just log into the website as a member, select AcademyU, and log into the courses you want to take. Lectures are organized by subspecialty, searchable for content and we can even track your CME. A new e-bookshelf is being developed to allow downloading resources to your computer or mobile device. Primary Care Otolaryngology is popular with primary care residents, physicians, PAs, NPs, and students. The Pocket Guide to Tumor Staging of Head and Neck Cancer is now available in its new third edition, and the new Trauma Manual is available this month. Comprehensive Otolaryngologic Curriculum Learning through Interactive Approach (COCLIA) has been launched in a new online format with updated study questions for residents. Clinical Otolaryngology OnLine (COOL) is a learning experience for PCPs, NP, PAs, medical students, and other healthcare professionals who encounter otolaryngological symptoms. This information can be downloaded directly from our website. Patient Management Perspectives in Otolaryngology is now available completely online for both PC and Mac applications and is popular with our membership. We are making progress with the following applications for mobile devices. Our journal, Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, is now available as an app on the iPhone and iPad. The three most recent issues are available continuously, and efforts are being made to make archived articles available. The Academy has a large databank of questions that is being put into a mobile app called the AcademyQ, and can be used for maintenance of certification (MOC) preparation. These questions have associated correct answers and references for further information and study. Our goal is to provide you with a search tool for all your knowledge needs that will be broader than PubMed, but narrower and more focused than a typical Google Internet search. You will be able to define the journals and websites you want to search. The information should eventually be deliverable to any device connected to the web. The technology allowing this type of connectivity is just now becoming available. The delivery of this product will take time, but it is obvious that when we provide you with this functionality you will also want to come to our website for all your additional needs regarding our specialty.
Rodney P. Lusk, MD, AAO-HNS/F President
I would like to spend my last Bulletin article emphasizing the Academy’s developing technology and how we serve our membership. We know our website needs to be more useful to those we serve: this includes both the public and Academy members. The needs of these two groups are different. The most active page on the site is “find an ENT.” In fact, it is so popular that we are currently creating an app for this page that will allow anyone to find an otolaryngologist within a defined location.
Prior to this year the website did not have a good site map and the pages had not been adequately meta-tagged and maintained. This is one of the reasons why your searches were not efficient. During the past year, all pages—more than 5,000, have been reviewed and evaluated for “currency” and relevancy by the Academy staff and committees. This has been an onerous task, but it is now completed. After assessing each page, the content was meta-tagged, or assigned key words, to improve your searches. A new search engine from Google has been implemented for more rapid and efficient searches using these newly created meta-tags. We are now working on the new site map.
Our goal is to provide the public and our membership with the most efficient tools for searching all otolaryngology or ENT literature. This is no easy task as searches are now performed from multiple devices, such as smartphones, tablets, laptops, and desktop computers. The operating systems of these devices are different and difficult to maximize for each utilization. We know that to maximize your efficiency we will have to deliver the information to you through any device connected to the Internet, whenever you need it. We are making steady progress and you should try the new search capacity, the following features, and give us your feedback as it continues to improve.
Let’s start with the annual meeting. You may have noticed the article in this year’s printed April Bulletin that you can track all papers, panels, and instruction courses by subspecialty at www.entnet.org/annual_meeting, which markedly improves your ability to find the educational materials of interest. This is a result of having the courses and papers properly meta-tagged just as the webpages are now tagged. The website now has an improved itinerary planner capable of searches by specialty, event time, day, presenter, and keywords.
AcademyU® has a wealth of information that is online and free to the membership. It’s easy to use—just log into the website as a member, select AcademyU, and log into the courses you want to take. Lectures are organized by subspecialty, searchable for content and we can even track your CME.
A new e-bookshelf is being developed to allow downloading resources to your computer or mobile device. Primary Care Otolaryngology is popular with primary care residents, physicians, PAs, NPs, and students. The Pocket Guide to Tumor Staging of Head and Neck Cancer is now available in its new third edition, and the new Trauma Manual is available this month.
Comprehensive Otolaryngologic Curriculum Learning through Interactive Approach (COCLIA) has been launched in a new online format with updated study questions for residents. Clinical Otolaryngology OnLine (COOL) is a learning experience for PCPs, NP, PAs, medical students, and other healthcare professionals who encounter otolaryngological symptoms. This information can be downloaded directly from our website.
Patient Management Perspectives in Otolaryngology is now available completely online for both PC and Mac applications and is popular with our membership.
We are making progress with the following applications for mobile devices. Our journal, Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, is now available as an app on the iPhone and iPad. The three most recent issues are available continuously, and efforts are being made to make archived articles available. The Academy has a large databank of questions that is being put into a mobile app called the AcademyQ, and can be used for maintenance of certification (MOC) preparation. These questions have associated correct answers and references for further information and study.
Our goal is to provide you with a search tool for all your knowledge needs that will be broader than PubMed, but narrower and more focused than a typical Google Internet search. You will be able to define the journals and websites you want to search. The information should eventually be deliverable to any device connected to the web. The technology allowing this type of connectivity is just now becoming available. The delivery of this product will take time, but it is obvious that when we provide you with this functionality you will also want to come to our website for all your additional needs regarding our specialty.