Pubmed Basics

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PubMed Basics A Doherty Library Information Literacy Tutorial

description

Learn the bare basics of searching

Transcript of Pubmed Basics

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PubMed BasicsA Doherty Library Information Literacy

Tutorial

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GoalsThrough viewing this presentation, you will

understand:I. What PubMed searchesII. What MeSH isIII. The basics of searching PubMedIV. Getting full text of articles

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I. What is PubMed?Searches MEDLINE, from U.S. National

Library of MedicineDates back to 1940sOver 21 million bibliographic records and

abstractsOrganized by MeSH, Medical Subject Headings

In addition to MEDLINE, PubMed searches ejournals, ebooks, and more

Access in Databases list at library.stthom.edu

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GoalsThrough viewing this presentation and trying

examples, you will understand:I. What PubMed searchesII. What MeSH isIII. The basics of searching PubMedIV. Getting full text of articles

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II. What is MeSH?Medical Subject HeadingsLets you find MEDLINE articles on the same topic that might use different words to describe that topic.

For example, the MeSH for heart attack is “myocardial infarction.” Some articles on this topic use the phrase, “heart attack,” but all articles on this topic in MEDLINE have “myocardial infarction” as a MeSH Subject Heading.

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II. What is MeSH?How do you use MeSH?PubMed tries to automatically match your

keywords with the best MeSH termsMeSH Major Topics are the most important

topics covered by a given article. In the article record, they have an asterisk (*). You can search for any keyword as a MeSH Major Topic using Advanced search.

Only MEDLINE articles have MeSH terms (i.e. not all of PubMed)

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GoalsThrough viewing this presentation and trying

examples, you will understand:I. What PubMed searchesII. What MeSH isIII. The basics of searching PubMedIV. Getting full text of articles

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III. How do I search PubMed?

This is the PubMed basic search page. As a first step, click on the “Advanced” search.

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Enter terms into these “Builder” boxes on the Advanced search page. The box above shows your search string.

PubMed tries to match the terms you enter with MeSH subject terms. Then PubMed will search for both your term and the MeSH subject term.

In this example, PubMed will search for cholesterol AND either “heart attack” OR the MeSH term, “myocardial infarction.”

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This “Search details” box shows what key terms PubMed actually used in its search.

In the results page, use the “Show additional filters” and “more…” buttons to show the full range of filters to help focus your results.

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Searching for “heart attack” as a “MeSH Major Topic” means that all your results will have “myocardial infarction” listed as a major topic of the article, i.e. as what the article is primarily about. “Myocardial infarction” will have an asterisk next to it in these article records’ subject lists.

Searching for a MeSH Major Topic limits your results to articles already indexed by MEDLINE.

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III. How do I search PubMed?In PubMed, you should keyword search just

like other databases, except:PubMed matches your terms with MeSH. Using quotation marks prevents MeSH

matching (e.g. “heart attack” will just search for “heart attack,” not myocardial infarction.)

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GoalsThrough viewing this presentation and trying

examples, you will understand:I. What PubMed searchesII. What MeSH isIII. The basics of searching PubMedIV. Getting full text of articles

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IV. How do I get full text of articles?Here are three alternatives:A. Go to askus.stthom.edu and type “pubmed” into

the question box. Use our tutorial to set up your NCBI account preferences to connect you with our full text.

B. Use UST OneSearch, on the library homepage. UST OneSearch includes all PubMed content, showing only our full-text resources by default. To access all PubMed content, click “Search worldwide” on the results page.

C. If these resources don’t work, use Interlibrary Loan.