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Library Orientation for Residents and Fellows

This guide will provide an overview of how to access the Rush Library resources; how to conduct an effective literature search; and resources available to assist you with identifying journals for publication.

Introduction

PubMed is the free public interface to the database MEDLINE, created by the National Library of Medicine (NLM).  PubMed comprises more than 32 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Citations may include links directly to full-text content.

Steps to a Successful Search

The PubMed Search Screen

The search screen below is the starting point for all PubMed database searches. Once you have decided on the keywords you want to search, type one of your keywords into the search bar.  If you would like to use MeSH terms, please click the tab to the left for instructions.

Searching by Concept

It is often a good idea to break your research into concepts, then search for each concept separately, using all of the appropriate terms possible.  For example, let's say you are researching the connection between high blood pressure and varicose veins.  You would do two separate searches, one on each concept, then combine them.  PubMed saves your search results for eight hours, or until you log off.   You could search on:

- "high blood pressure" OR hypertension              and then, in another search:

- "varicose veins" OR "spider veins" OR varicoses or varicosities

 

Combining Searches

Now you need to find articles that pertain to both hypertension and varicose veins.  We'll do this by combining the searches. To find your searches, click the Advanced link beneath the search box.  In Advanced Search, you will see your search history.  

In this case, we want articles that pertain to hypertension AND varicose veins.    Click the three dots in front of one of the search strings, and then  "Add Query".   You will see that doing so populates the "Query Box" in the search builder above.

 

Now go to your second search string, click the three dots and choose "Add with AND".   This adds our second concept to the Query Box above. This is telling PubMed that we want articles about both hypertension AND varicose veins. 

 

Hit Search.

 

Limiting Your Results

The search above gives us over 1500 results.  We can refine these results by using the filters to the left.  For example, we can limit by date of publication.  Choosing "Additional Filters" allows you to limit by language, species, age, type of publication and many more.   Limiting results to the past 10 years along reduces results to less than 500.

Another way to refine results is to limit citations returned to those in which the keywords show up in the title or abstract.  To do this, construct your search string as above and search on it in PubMed.  Go into Advanced (right under the Search box) and change the dropdown box for "All Fields" to TItle/Abstract, then hit search.  Do this for each search string, and then combine results as shown above.

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Saving Citations to RefWorks

At this point, you probably want to add your citations to RefWorks or another citation management system. For help adding your citations to RefWorks, click the Saving PubMed Results to RefWorks tab to the left.

 

 

Maps and Directions

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