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1 Online Searching, 4 th ed. Chapter 6 PubMed Search Example 2: Searching with Field Codes pp. 100 – 102 Librarian’s Guide to Cultivating Database Skills.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Online Searching, 4 th ed. Chapter 6 PubMed Search Example 2: Searching with Field Codes pp. 100 – 102 Librarian’s Guide to Cultivating Database Skills."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Online Searching, 4 th ed. Chapter 6 PubMed Search Example 2: Searching with Field Codes pp. 100 – 102 Librarian’s Guide to Cultivating Database Skills for Research and Instruction

2 2 Searching with field codes in PubMed is just like searching in any database that provides dropdowns of fields to search in. What you are telling the database to do is the same; the results will be different because the different databases cover different collections of journals (and other document types). For the record: the PubMed search produced 582 results just now; the CINAHL (nursing database) produced 677. If you want to know about nurses, go to the nursing database!

3 3 This On page 101 of the textbook, I note that you have to get a ways down in the list of results before you see one that is marked “indexed for MEDLINE” (which would be a result we could mine for Subject Terms). Here is a screenshot of what I’m talking about: As opposed to Momentary aside for clarity…

4 4 Back to our search on preventing burnout in nurses: These are looking useful: Changing it up - option 3 on p. 101 – with an extra fillip: (what happens if you change US to USA in this search? Try it)

5 5 Field code search for specific Author names: To retrieve one good record with informative MeSH terms: Click to reveal the MeSH terms Click to reveal the MeSH terms Then as directed in the book, use the mini-menu to add the “Burnout,…” and “Nursing Staff” headings to your search – but OOPS!! I dropped an essential step: Delete the existing Author search from the search box! Then as directed in the book, use the mini-menu to add the “Burnout,…” and “Nursing Staff” headings to your search – but OOPS!! I dropped an essential step: Delete the existing Author search from the search box! (Your new search, constructed from MeSH terms, should look like this)

6 6 VS. Number of results? Precision of results? Most recent results? Compare, contrast: the very structured, MeSH terms search vs. a keyword-inspired-by-MeSH-terms search.


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