{"id":26289,"date":"2023-03-02T11:00:12","date_gmt":"2023-03-02T16:00:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=26289"},"modified":"2025-02-06T14:02:01","modified_gmt":"2025-02-06T19:02:01","slug":"covid-19-web-collecting-reflections-at-three-years","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2023\/03\/02\/covid-19-web-collecting-reflections-at-three-years\/","title":{"rendered":"COVID-19 Web Collecting: Reflections at Three Years"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Christie Moffatt ~<\/em><\/p>\n In January 2020, the National Library of Medicine\u2019s Web Collecting and Archiving Working Group, a team of archivists, librarians, and historians, began a new web collecting effort to document the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak as part of a larger Global Health Events web archive<\/a>.\u00a0 This work is supported by the\u00a0Collection Development Guidelines of the National Library of Medicine<\/a> (NLM), which considers websites, blogs, social media and other web content to play an increasingly important role in documenting the scholarly biomedical record and illustrating a diversity of cultural perspectives in health and medicine. Three years in, the ongoing web archive now includes nearly 20,000 web resources documenting the broad impact and response to the pandemic from a diversity of perspectives, mainly from the United States. The Working Group continues to learn many lessons along the way, including the value of collaboration, teamwork, and creative problem solving to develop this web archive, which we believe will serve as a valuable resource of primary historical material of this time for researchers seeking to explore, understand, and learn from the experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic for many years to come.<\/p>\n In this third year of collecting, the Working Group moved from broad collecting across dozens of topics across the pandemic to more focused selection on areas of primary interest, including the U.S. Federal government response, experience and impact of the pandemic on vulnerable populations, health disparities, and websites entirely devoted to new initiatives and programs related to the pandemic.<\/p>\n<\/a>