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Conducting Health Sciences Review Articles

This is a guide for helping students to develop and write literature reviews.

Select Databases to Search

PubMed is a common starting database for health sciences literature reviews, and for some projects, will provide enough journal articles.

Databases index journals and no database includes all journals in all subject areas. If you are unable to find relevant materials in PubMed or, your question focuses on specific aspects of health sciences, you may want to use another database in addition to PubMed. See common sources for health sciences-related questions below; review the A-Z list of databases to see more; or ask a librarian.

Boolean Operators

 

    Connecting terms with AND requires all terms to appear in the same article.

 

 

 

    Connecting terms with OR results in articles that include one term, a combination of terms, or all of the terms.

Build Search Strategy

Before starting your database search, think about terms that can be used to describe the key concepts in your research question. Start your search with terms that you think make sense. When you find citations that are highly relevant to your research, take a closer look at those records. Examine those records for two types of terms that you can use in your search: subject headings and keywords.

  • Subject Heading: A single, assigned term that stands for a concept. For example, in PubMed, any paper that discusses acetylsalicylic acid would be assigned the Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) term aspirin. A search for the MeSH term Aspirin in PubMed should find papers written about aspirin whether or not the word actually appears in the title or abstract.
  • Keyword: Term used for a concept in everyday language. For example, if you need to find articles written about bedpans, the Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) term Toilet Facilities in PubMed may be too broad. Just searching for bedpan OR bedpans by typing this directly into the search box might work better.

Subject headings and keywords have different advantages and disadvantages. Keywords can retrieve new articles that do not yet have subject headings assigned to them. You can also use keywords to capture alternative spellings. Subject headings, however, will help you find highly relevant articles, and may mitigate the need to search for synonyms.

When you conduct your search, consider whether it makes sense to use keywords, subject headings, or both.

See "Documenting Your Search" to learn how to keep track of useful terms.

Apply Filters/Limits

Many databases allow you to filter your search. You can usually find filters are on the left-hand side of your results page. Based on your inclusion exclusion criteria, you may want to filter your results based on:

  • Age group
  • Sex
  • Publication date range (e.g. last 10 years)
  • Species
  • Source (e.g. journal name)
  • Language
  • Article type (e.g. review, research report, etc.)
  • Study type (e.g. randomized-control trial, cohort, etc.)

Translate Search Between Databases

If you're searching different databases for information, keep in mind that you may need to adjust your search terms for each database. For instance, the equivalent subject heading for "Heart, Artificial" in PubMed is "Heart, Mechanical" in CINAHL. Additionally, because CINAHL is an allied health and nursing database, you will find specialized subject headings such as "Toileting" in CINAHL that you won't find in PubMed. You will also find that you cannot use MeSH tag in Scopus.

Keywords are more likely to stay consistent across databases.