PubMed is a free online database developed and maintained by the National Center for Biotechnology Information that contains over 16 million citations and abstracts for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. It covers topics related to medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, health administration and patient education. Users can search PubMed to find academic journal articles and filter results.
Overview of different ways of searching the PubMed database: cross-searched with Entrez, basic search, author search, journal search, searching for special topics, single citation matching, and advanced search.
HealthMed Complete database searching, female fetus 2017Lucia Ravi
A basic introduction to constructing a simple search within the Health and Medical Complete Database. Sample search on "Female fetus" as a topic created for the IMED1108, Sem2, 2017.
PsychINFO database searching, gender dysphoria 2017Lucia Ravi
A basic introduction to constructing a simple search within the the PsycINFO Database on the Ovid platform. Sample search on "Gender Dysphoria" as a topic created for the IMED1108, Sem2, 2017.
This presentation will introduce you to the basics of starting a search in UWA's OneSearch catalogue.
It was created by the UWA Library to support student's researching for their IMED1108 assessment.
PubMed provides links to the integrated molecular biology databases maintained by NCBI. These databases contain: DNA and protein sequences, genome mapping data, and 3‑D protein structures, aligned sequences from populations, and the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM). Links between MEDLINE records and sequence records make it easy to find MEDLINE abstracts associated with sequence records and vice versa.
Overview of different ways of searching the PubMed database: cross-searched with Entrez, basic search, author search, journal search, searching for special topics, single citation matching, and advanced search.
HealthMed Complete database searching, female fetus 2017Lucia Ravi
A basic introduction to constructing a simple search within the Health and Medical Complete Database. Sample search on "Female fetus" as a topic created for the IMED1108, Sem2, 2017.
PsychINFO database searching, gender dysphoria 2017Lucia Ravi
A basic introduction to constructing a simple search within the the PsycINFO Database on the Ovid platform. Sample search on "Gender Dysphoria" as a topic created for the IMED1108, Sem2, 2017.
This presentation will introduce you to the basics of starting a search in UWA's OneSearch catalogue.
It was created by the UWA Library to support student's researching for their IMED1108 assessment.
PubMed provides links to the integrated molecular biology databases maintained by NCBI. These databases contain: DNA and protein sequences, genome mapping data, and 3‑D protein structures, aligned sequences from populations, and the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM). Links between MEDLINE records and sequence records make it easy to find MEDLINE abstracts associated with sequence records and vice versa.
Presentation given to clinical preceptors as part of the SWOMEN (Southwestern Ontario Medical Education Network) Teaching Retreat, held on October 24, 2009 at the Elm Hurst Inn in Ingersoll, Ontario
Searching class conducted on March 23, 2010 for the graduate students in the Faculty of Information and Media Studies at the University of Western Ontario.
Janet Schnall's presentation about Evidence Based Nursing Resources at our free monthly webcast. Recording available at https://webmeeting.nih.gov/p96958659/
2. Getting to PubMed http://pubmed.gov Always free. No log in needed. You can access this from any computer in the world.
3. What is PubMed? The biggest and best biomedical bibliographic database in the world Over 16 million bibliographic citations Over 600,000 citations added each year 4,800 journals More than 50 languages
7. What’s all the NCBI stuff? PubMed is MEDLINE plus genetic resources PubMed was developed and maintained by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) located at the National Library of Medicine (NLM) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
As you look through results, you will see hoards of tempting icons. Unless you click on an icon that says “Free” on it, you will be taken to the publisher website and asked to pay $30-40 for the privilege of viewing the article. There is no need to do that. You can check the A-to-Z List from the library home page and access your article that way (I’ll show you that later). Or you can send the citation to me and I can get it in about 1-3 days. If you need a rush on the article for an urgent patient care issue, just let me know, and you should receive it within a few hours.There is no direct cost to the hospital for articles. We contract with UAA and have collaborative agreements with other libraries so aren’t charged for the articles you request. There is no limit on what you can request.