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Searching the Medical Literature

By Sharon   Dr.Gross, Rt. Biomet 8/24/06

Searching The Medical Literature:

I regularly search and use medical literature. A couple of tips.

First, many public or state libraries will provide single copies or
pdf. files if you give them the citation. This policy probably varies
greatly with budget limitations and locale, but it is worth inquiring.
Local hospital libraries will often accommodate reasonable
patient requests for copies or help you with your search. Large
university teaching hospital medical libraries are also potential
resources. You can also "google" the article authors to see if anyone
has posted the article you want on the net.

Second, a rich resource is the Pub Med system maintained by the
National Library of Medicine. Abstracts and sometimes whole articles
are available on-line through this resource.

1. Go to:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?DB=pubmed

It offers you the choice of searching by topic, author, or journal.
Entering the search terms "hip resurfacing" yielded 222 articles, for
example.
If you know what article or authors you want, you enter the last name
and initials of one or two authors in this format:
smith jc, jones tw
Then hit the "GO" button and the program will list all the articles
written by those authors.

2. After entering your search terms or author names and hitting the
"GO" button, you will receive a list of articles. In the tabbed gray
area at the top of the list will be the total number of articles
retrieved, in this case, 222. Above your list of articles are four
drop-down menu boxes.

a. The first is "Display." Hit the drop down arrow and pick
"Abstract." Peer reviewed journals require the author(s) to
summarize their research objective, methods, and key findings in 300
or so words. This allows the reader to quickly scan to see if the
article is relevant for their purposes. Editorials or commentaries
don't have abstracts.
b. In the "Show" box, you have a couple of options. If you want to
work your way through the list in sections (say 50 articles at a
time), you must select the number corresponding to how many articles
you want to scan at a time. The program will display 50 articles in
each section. This is important because when you are ready to send
your selected articles to text (see d. and #4)-you will have to
process each section separately. This is a confusing feature of the
Pub Med program. The easy out is to select the number that most
closely matches the total.
c. In the "Sort by" box, I usually select "Pub Date."

d. Don't do anything with "Send TO" now.

3. Now as you go through the listed articles, there will be a box next
to each article--IF YOU WANT TO PRINT THE ABSTRACT OR CITATION AFTER
YOU'VE SCANNED THE ARTICLES ON THE LIST--CHECK THAT BOX. Next to each
citation is an icon that looks like a page-if it has three lines
across running half way on the page-the article has an abstract.

4. After you've finished reviewing one section or the entire list of
articles, go back to the "Send To" box, and select "Text" if you want
to print the abstracts/citations of your selected articles. A new
plain text list will come up that should contain your selected
citations/abstracts. You can save the list to your files ("Save Page"
in your browser's file menu, or print it, using your browser printing
feature. Sometimes mysterious glitches occur, so another option is to
select the text and paste it into a Word file or whatever word
processing program you use, and then print it. A tip: Most abstracts
will fit nicely on 5x8" index cards-so if you want to sort the
material on cards, it's a handy way of organizing the material.

Good Hunting...

Sharon (Gross, Rt. Biomet 8/24/06)
Bandon, OR


 


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