search the literature: the beginning

Post on 13-Dec-2014

692 Views

Category:

Education

3 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Searching the Literature:the Beginning

Mary Shah, MLSHorblit Health Sciences Library

Danbury HospitalMary.shah@danhosp.org

Search StrategyPlan your search at first and the process

will be much more effective.

1. Focus on what you are seeking and think about which resources would best have the answer.

2. Break down the query in basic terms.

3. Choose the research method.4. Search each point separately.5. Combine these subjects with AND,

OR, NOT (these are Boolean Operators).

6. Focus your search with limits.

PICOPICO can be used to help break down your

question• Patient or Population: How would I

describe a group of patients similar to mine?

• Intervention: Which main intervention, prognosis, or exposure am I considering?

• Comparison: What is the main alternative to compare with the intervention?

• Outcome: What can I hope to accomplish, measure, improve or affect?

Where to search?• Basic Reference = Search engine

like Google• Background or Introduction =

textbook• Research Article = database like

CINAHL or Pub Med• Practice = Cochrane, DynaMed,

Nursing Reference Center

Choosing the EvidenceMeta analyses‐

Systematic reviews

Randomized controlled trials

Cohort studies

Case control studies‐

Case series and case reports

Animal and laboratory research

Higher Quality Percentage of the

literature

What does this mean?Evidence-based practice is

the systemic application of scientific findings to clinical practice and

decision making.

Tools already exist to rate the quality of study and its ability to inform the scientific community.

Boolean? Halloween meat?

George Boole brought together philosophy and math by inventing a logic that worked well with computers: the answer is either true or false.

For your search, this means you can combine two search terms using the connectors: AND, OR, NOT.

Combining search termsAND

Another possibilityOR

Fall*

Patientcancer

Another possibilityNOT

Fall*

Patientcancer

Truncation?! Are we going someplace w/ an elephant?

• Truncation is a short-cut to include all the possibilities:

fall*= fall, falls, falling, fallen, and so forth…

• Wildcards fill in for variations:Reali?e = realize, realise

Not just for dialogue any moreQuotation marks force the database to look for

that specific combination of words.

In CINAHL: • Practice Guideline without quotes: 90,812

results• Practice Guideline with quotes: 3,656 results

10 MinutesIf you’re taking more than ten minutes to find what you need, stop and contact us. You are the health professional and we are the information specialists. Fax, phone or email—it’s not interrupting, it’s our job.

Horblit Health Sciences Library

Amanda Pomeroy, MLS203-739-7279amanda.pomeroy@danhosp.org

Mary Shah, MLS203-739-7035mary.shah@danhosp.org

top related