Hospital eResources
San Francisco Public Library, Calif.
Innovation Synopsis
San Francisco Public Library partnered with the University of California San Francisco Hospital-Parnassus in a first-of-its-kind program to issue digital-access library cards to hospitalized city residents to meet their needs for books, newspapers, magazines, movies and music in English, Spanish, Chinese and Russian via our extensive digital collections. (UCSF has 900 beds.)
Challenge/Opportunity
The average stay at UCSF is more than a month. During this period, there is high demand from patients for reading, viewing and listening materials. Locating, purchasing, sterilizing, storing and retaining materials in requested languages are hospital challenges. By creating a means for patients to apply for a digital-access library card, SFPL helps meet patient/patron demand. Further, our digital collections for youth allow hospitalized parents to share reassuring and high-quality storytimes with their visiting children.
Key Elements of Innovation
SFPL provides applications, physical cards, training and technical assistance on apps (e.g., Hoopla, Flipster, PressReader) to be auto-loaded on loaner devices (which are wiped and re-imaged every evening for privacy) or uploaded on personal devices. UCSF volunteers assist patients in application and account creation; after review, forms are faxed to SFPL for immediate account creation and card activation. (For an upgrade to full-access, patrons visit SFPL with proof of current address after discharge from UCSF.)
Achieved Outcomes
During the pilot period, feedback has been positive. Once the initial set-up is complete, it is a high-benefit/no-cost program for both organizations; the hospital gains vast entertainment and educational materials (and volunteers are already visiting all newly admitted patients), and the library expands outreach and circulation to a highly receptive audience without expending scarce staff time (applications arrive at our office). We anticipate expanding to UCSF’s other locations as well as other San Francisco hospitals.