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Published byJoseph Conway Modified over 11 years ago
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AHILA-WHO-INASP workshop Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, July 2005 Martha J Garrett, Director, INFORM Journal articles using free full-text filters
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Free full-text articles via Medline About 1 million Includes PubMed Central + Link-Out
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How it works at PubMed Go to www.pubmed.orgwww.pubmed.org Do search Add: AND Free Full Text [Filter]
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Free full-text articles at PubMed via HINARI About 2.8 million Those free to everyone + those paid for by HINARI Must be eligible and registered with HINARI
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How it works at HINARI Go to www.healthinternetwork.orgwww.healthinternetwork.org Log on! Click on scientific publications, then on search for articles through Pubmed Do search and then add: AND (loprovhinari[sb] OR free full text[sb])
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Pre-set searches for full-text articles Use PubMed filter Searches already formulated Available at GFMER & INASP Health Links Only for selected topics
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How it works at GFMER Go to www.gfmer.ch, click on Englishwww.gfmer.ch Click on Databases, links Click on Obstetrics, gynecology…. Select a topic On new page, click on PubMed near top
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How it works at Health Links Go to www.inasp.infowww.inasp.info Click on Health, then Health Links (2 x) Scroll to Specific Health Resources Click on topic Click on Pubmed – Free Fulltext Articles
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Free full-text articles via Google Uses new feature called Google Scholar Searches article databases & other sources Covers all academic sectors
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How it works at Google Go to scholar.google.comscholar.google.com Click on Advanced Scholar Search Type in search term(s) in top line In second line type: free full text
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Free full-text filters can be tricky Results very exciting But ask yourself if you are excluding: Full text available via subsidized access Valuable information in abstracts
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