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Five Strategies for Effective Searching. Develop a search strategyUse the vocabulary appropriatelyLook at the bibliographies of the relevant articlesFind out who has cited the relevant articles and determine their relevancy to your projectAsk a librarian!. Strategy
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1. Effective Search Strategies Helena VonVille
June 15, 2007
3. Strategy #1 Develop a Search Strategy Write out your search strategy
Combination of terms and concepts
Three concepts generally works the best
Not a hard and fast rule
Search broadly for each concept, and narrow by combining terms
4. Conceptualize Search Think about synonyms or like terms to describe the concepts
HIV/AIDS
HIV or AIDS or Human Immunodeficiency Virus or Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
Disease transmission
Disease transmission or vertical transmission or infection control
Pregnancy
Pregnancy or pregnancy outcomes or postpartum or delivery or childbirth or labor or delivery or (labor and delivery)
5. How OR Works
6. How AND Works
7. How AND Works
8. Strategy #2 Use the Appropriate Vocabulary MeSH: Medical Subject Headings
Used by Medline & PubMed
CINAHL Thesaurus
Ovid makes it easy to map terms
9. Strategy #3Use Bibliographies of Relevant Articles Do you see anything new?
10. Strategy #4Determine who has cited relevant articles Use Scopus or Web of Science (from the Library databases page) to determine who has cited your article
11. Scopus Results 20 other articles have cited these recommendations
12. Strategy #5Questions? Contact Helena VonVille at Helena.M.VonVille@uth.tmc.edu or 713-500-9131 OR
HAM-TMC Library
713.799.7161
http://resource.library.tmc.edu/reference/reference.cfm