Interlibrary loan in US and Canadian health sciences libraries 2005: update on journal article use

J Med Libr Assoc. 2007 Apr;95(2):189-94. doi: 10.3163/1536-5050.95.2.189.

Abstract

Purpose: The authors analyzed 2.48 million interlibrary loan (ILL) requests entered in the National Library of Medicine's (NLM's) DOCLINE system from 3,234 US and Canadian medical libraries during fiscal year (FY) 2005 to study their distribution and nature and the journals in which requested articles were published.

Methods: Data from DOCLINE and NLM's indexing system and online catalog were used to analyze all DOCLINE ILL transactions acted on from October 2004 to September 2005. The authors compared results from this analysis to previous data collected in FY 1992.

Results: Overall ILL volume in the United States and Canada is at about the same level as FY 1992 despite marked growth in online searching, knowledge discovery tools, and journals available online. Over 21,000 unique journal titles and 1.4 million unique articles were used to fill 2.2 million ILL requests in FY 2005. Over 1 million of the articles were requested only once by any network library. Fifty-two percent (11,022) of journals had 5 or fewer requests for articles from all the years of a journal by all libraries in the network. Fifty-two percent of the articles requested were published within the most recent 5 years.

Conclusion: The overall ILL profile in the libraries studied has changed little since FY 1992, notable given other changes in publishing. Small changes, however, may reveal developing trends. Total ILL traffic has been declining in recent years following a peak in 2002, and fewer of the articles requested were published in the most recent five years compared to requests from 1992.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • Interlibrary Loans / statistics & numerical data
  • Interlibrary Loans / trends*
  • Libraries, Medical / statistics & numerical data
  • Libraries, Medical / trends*
  • MEDLINE / statistics & numerical data
  • MEDLINE / trends
  • National Library of Medicine (U.S.) / statistics & numerical data*
  • Periodicals as Topic / statistics & numerical data*
  • United States