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6. Review of the Literature. Learning Objectives. Determine The Purposes For The Literature Review Recognize The Need For Becoming Familiar With The Library's Services Distinguish Between Primary And Secondary Sources In Research Literature Recognize The Importance Of Grey Literature.
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6 Review of the Literature
Learning Objectives • Determine The Purposes For The Literature Review • Recognize The Need For Becoming Familiar With The Library's Services • Distinguish Between Primary And Secondary Sources In Research Literature • Recognize The Importance Of Grey Literature
Learning Objectives Discuss Print Resources That May Be Used In Locating Literature References Discuss Electronic Sources That May Be Used In Locating Literature References Compare Electronic Sources That Are Useful For Nurses When Conducting A Literature Re-view Obtain References From Online Journals
Learning Objectives Conduct A Literature Search On A Given Topic Extract Pertinent Information From Literature Sources Critique The Literature Review Section Of Research Articles
Learning Objective OneDetermine The Purposes For The Literature Review
The Literature Review • Find out what is in print • Help to refine study topic • Narrow study topic
Recommendations for Research • Research topics • Replication ideas • Another aspect of the problem
Frameworks of Research • Find theoretical or conceptual frameworks • See how frameworks are used • Help guide study as research unfolds
Other Helpful Aspects • Helps plan study methodology • Locates study instruments • Suggests ways to analyze data • Capitalizes on past successes • Prevents errors of other researchers
Learning Objective TwoRecognize The Need For Becoming Familiar With The Library's Services
The Library and Its Staff • Wealth of information • Familiar with resources • Help in search techniques • Policies and interlibrary loans
Clinician-Librarian Collaboration • Helps with evidence-based searches • Find high level of evidence • Controlled trials • Systematic reviews • Find practice guidelines
Learning Objective ThreeDistinguish Between Primary And Secondary Sources In Research Literature
Primary Sources • Written by original investigator or researcher • Journal articles • Preferred source • Start by reading abstract or summary • Reference citations
Secondary Sources • Not written by original study researcher • Summaries • Risk of misinterpretation or omission • Use in conjunction with primary sources
Learning Objective FourRecognize The Importance Of Grey Literature
Grey (Also Called Gray) Literature • Not commercially published • Not indexed or available in major databases • Examples • Conference proceedings • Dissertations • Theses • Technical reports • Unpublished research reports
Publication Bias • No significant findings • Should not be omitted
Learning Objective FiveDiscuss Print Resources That May Be Used In Locating Literature References
Types of Print Sources • Indexes • Reference materials on periodicals and books • Assistance in obtaining publications • Abstracts • Brief summaries of articles • Purpose, methods, and major findings • Helpful to see if entire study needs to be read
Indexes • CINAHL • Nursing journals from 1961 to 1977 • Nursing and allied health literature 1977 to present • Available online • Index Medicus • Nursing and allied health from 1870 • 2004: print version discontinued • Available online: MEDLINE
Abstracts • Nursing Research Abstracts • 1960 to 1978 • Bimonthly issues of Nursing Research • November/December issue: author/subject guide for year’s published abstracts
Abstracts Psychological Abstracts First published in 1927 1,300 professional journals Psychology and related fields CD-ROM version updated quarterly Dissertation Abstracts International Doctoral dissertations Published since 1938 Abstracts written by dissertation authors
Abstracts Master Abstracts International (MAI) Author written Submitted voluntarily Small percentage in print
Learning Objective SixDiscuss Electronic Sources That May Be Used In Locating Literature References
Electronic Communication • Changes how information is retrieved, disseminated • Affects the communication process
Electronic Sources • Online catalogs • Online library card catalog • Title, author, subject heading, keyword searches • OCLC Interlibrary Loan service • e-books
Electronic Sources • Online databases • Access from home • Search engines • Megasearch engines • Well-developed search strategy • Time consuming, unpredictable • Advantages over print databases
Learning Objective SevenCompare Electronic Sources That Are Useful For Nurses When Conducting A Literature Review
Online Sources for Nursing • CINAHL Online Databases • Variety of resource types • Internet platforms
The CINAHL Database • > 2,890 journals • 1981 to present • > 2 million records • 70 full-text journals • Other resources
CINAHL Plus • All features of basic database • > 4,300 journals • 1937 to present • Nearly 80 full-text journals • Other resources
CINAHL With Full Text • > 2,980 journals • 1981 to present • > 600 full-text journals
CINAHL Plus With Full Text • Newest database for nursing • > 4,300 journals • 1937 to present • > 760 full-text journals
Registry of Nursing Research • http://nursinglibrary.org/ • Sigma Theta Tau International
MEDLINE • http://www.pubmed.gov • Life sciences, biomedicine • > 5,400 journals • Worldwide coverage • National Library of Medicine
MEDLINE With Full Text • Most comprehensive source for full-text medical journals • >1,450 full-text journals • Coverage: 1949 to present • Full-text material: 1965 to present
MEDLINEPlus • www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ • Consumer health information • 800 topics • Easy to read
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews • www.cochrane.org/reviews/ • International network of authors and institutions • Archie Cochrane founded in 1993 • Stresses evidence-based practice • Meta-analysis source
ERIC • http://eric.ed.gov/ • Education information • Bibliographic and full text
Psycinfo • Psychology, related disciplines • > 2.8 million records • Records from 1800s to present • Purchase 24-hour searching • http://apa.org/pubs/databases/access/direct.aspx
Dissertation Abstracts Online • ProQuest Information and Learning • Degree-granting institutions since 1861 • Selected master’s theses, doctoral dissertations
Other Online Databases • ProQuest Nursing & Allied Health Source • AIDSinfo (http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/) • Haz-Map (http://hazmap.nlm.nih.gov/) • ClinicalTrials (http://clinicaltrials.gov) • TOXNET (http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/)
Learning Objective EightObtain References From Online Journals
Online Journals • E-journals, e-zines • Immediate knowledge dissemination • Not all free • More print journals making articles available online
Learning Objective NineConduct A Literature Search On A Given Topic
Strategic Hints for Success • Read sources first • Record bibliographic information • Use reference citations—APA • Record references accurately • Remember dates and pages
Source Dates • Current dates • Older than 5 years • Questions to ask
Paraphrases and Quotes • Search for paraphrases • Critically appraise the information • Review concisely and to the point
Learning Objective TenExtract Pertinent Information From Literature Sources