Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps (2024)

OK, so you have a research problem that you want to solve or answer using evidence based in the literature. You need to find the right literature and capture it by spreading your net wide, and in the right places. You need a strategy for searching the literature….a search strategy if you will. I hope that these 5 steps will get you to where you want to be.

Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps (1)

What is a search strategy?

1.A structured organisation of terms used to search a database

2.A document that shows how terms combine to retrieve the best results

3.Something that must be adapted for each database you use

4.Something which is tailored to the question you are trying to answer

5.A good search strategy is something that takes time to refine

Different ways to search the literature

1.Electronically

2.Manually

3.Snowballing of the literature (going from reference list to reference list to find what you need.

4.We can do a rapid review of the literature or an exhaustive one

5.We can see what other published literature reviews have done and how they have found their literature for ideas.

6.Ask! (Librarians, authors etc.)… authors of great papers often know of other papers you may be looking for…why not ask them?

Example:
P(ProblemorPatientor Population)postnatal infections
I(intervention/indicator)hand washing
C(comparison)no hand washing
O(outcome of interest)infection rates and recovery

Whilst PICO can sometimes be seen as the go to tool for formulating your question…don’t be limited by it. Here are a few other tools to help your formulate your perfect research question…

Methodology e.g. questionnaires

Issues e.g. ethical decision-making

Participants e.g. midwives or patients

—————————————————

Setting – Where? What is the context?

Perspective – For who?

Intervention (Subject of Interest)– What?

Comparison – What else?

Evaluation – What results?

————————————————————

Sample

Phenomenon of Interest

Design

Evaluation

Research type

————————————————————

Client – who is the service aimed at?

Location – where?

Improvement – what do you want to find out?

Professional – who is involved in providing/improving the service?

——————————————–

Context

Intervention

Mechanism

Outcome

CoCoPopis used to frame questions on the prevalence of a condition, disease, problem or symptom.

Condition
  • Which condition, disease, problem or symptom are you looking at?
Context
  • When is this happening?
  • Where is this happening? (Geographical location, e.g. Australia / Service location, e.g. hospital)
Population
  • How is your population defined? (e.g. age, gender, ethnic group …)

———————————————————————————

Expectation—What do you want the information for?

Client Group.

Location.

Impact— What change are you looking for? How is this being measured?

Professionals.

SErvice—For example, community services, birth centres or accident and emergency.

Different search databases should be searched separately as they each have their own dictionaries of terms and keywords. Each database is tailored toward a particular topic of interest. The following set of databases relate to healthcare topics.

1.Web of Science (strong coverage which goes back to 1990 and most of its journals written in English)

2.Scopus (Covers a superior number of journals but with lower impact and limited to recent articles)

3.CINHAL (Prime source of nursing and allied health literature)

4.Pubmed & MEDLINE (Great starting point for any health or medical literature search.)

5.Cochrane (Thesource of systematic reviews)

6.NHS Evidence & The TRIP database (Search a limited number of high quality sources)

7.PsychINFO (Prime source for psychology and psychiatry literature.)

8.AMED (Allied and Complementary Medicine Database)

9.HMIC (Health Information Management Consortium – great information from DoH and Kings Fund)

There are no strict rules as to how many databases you should search. That would depend on how thorough you are trying to be. Also, many databases will pick up duplicates for you…which you will later need to delete.

A concept map is a visual representation of concepts within your research question or ‘problem’ and their relationships to each other.

To create a concept map:

  • Write down the main concepts which relate to your research question and circle them on a blank page.
  • Write down other words/concepts and ideas which relate to each of your concepts in groups. Draw lines between conceptsto show how they are related.

Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps (2)

Some of these you may already have found in your concept mapping work, however, you really need to grab every keyword you can to get the best results…sometimes your databases will already have predefined keywords for you to use….helpful 🙂

To identify your own keywords, you will need to break down your own research question. I will go back to using our example.

In what ways doesHand washingamongmidwivesimpact uponPostnatal infections?
‘OR’‘AND’‘OR’‘AND’‘OR’
Hand hygieneMidwifery staffPostpartum infections
‘OR’ Clean hands‘OR’ Midwi*‘OR’ After birth
‘OR’ Washed hands‘OR’ Postnatal sepsis

Sounds easy right? Well let me show you how to do this using an example from one of my published systematic literature reviews.

The questions relating to this review were…

1) What interventions have been developed to support midwives and/or student midwives in work-related psychological distress? and 2) What are the outcomes and experiences associated with the use of these interventions?

Key concepts have been underlined.

Below is a search strategy I built to answer these research questions. This was used to search one database only.

Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps (3)

As you can see, the search starts right from the bottom with the first concept ‘midwives’… the ‘population’. Each concept moving forward is grouped together with keywords combined with the boolean operator ‘OR’. When I need to combine concepts nearer the top, I combine them using the boolean operator ‘AND’. See below…

Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps (4)

This search strategy also uses truncations, where I have entered the root of the word and then a (*) at the end. When you do this, the database will then return any ending of the root word. Another example of this would be ….child* = child, childs, children, childrens, childhood.

If a word you want to find is spelled in different ways, wildcards can also be used to substitute a symbol for one letter of a word. Examples of how you might use this may be

wom!n = woman, women
colo?r = color, colour

(Credits tohttps://libraries.mit.edu/experts/)

Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps (5)

If you are looking to publish a paper and would like me to join your team, I am always happy to be a co-author on your article in exchange for guidance and insight… Not sure how to do this?…see my post…’Why Midwifery and Nursing Students Should Publish their Work andHow’for further info.

I hope you find this ‘How to’ guide useful. I now look forward to you all going forth to develop and share your own search strategies with me. I can’t wait to see what problems you will solve 🙂

If you would like to follow the progress of my work going forward..

Follow me via@SallyPezaro;The Academic Midwife;This blog

Until next time…Look after yourselves and each other💚💙💜❤

Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps (2024)

FAQs

Developing your literature search strategy in 5 easy steps? ›

Find reliable sources for background information. Identify the main concepts related to a topic. Generate effective search terms.

What are the 5 steps to creating a search strategy? ›

Writing Effective Search Strategies
  1. Step 1: Identify key concepts. ...
  2. Step 2: Identify alternative search terms. ...
  3. Step 3: Consider using limiters (available in a library database) ...
  4. Step 4: Combine your search terms. ...
  5. Step 5: Review your search results. ...
  6. Step 6: Adjust your strategy.
Mar 4, 2024

How to develop a literature search strategy? ›

  1. Choose search terms. ...
  2. Search with keywords. ...
  3. Search for the exact phrase. ...
  4. Truncation and wildcard searches. ...
  5. Use adjacency searching for more accurate results. ...
  6. Searching with subject headings. ...
  7. Use Boolean logic to combine search terms. ...
  8. Citation searching.

What are the 3 parts of developing a search strategy? ›

Find reliable sources for background information. Identify the main concepts related to a topic. Generate effective search terms.

What is literature search technique? ›

Literature search is done to identify appropriate methodology, design of the study; population sampled and sampling methods, methods of measuring concepts and techniques of analysis. It also helps in determining extraneous variables affecting the outcome and identifying faults or lacunae that could be avoided.

What are 5 tips you can find to use when using a search engine to help you find more information? ›

In this article, we explore seven steps that you can take to pinpoint specific information online.
  • Vary Your Search Engine. ...
  • Use Specific Keywords. ...
  • Simplify Your Search Terms. ...
  • Use Quotation Marks. ...
  • Remove Unhelpful Words. ...
  • Refine Your Search Using Operators. ...
  • Avoid Search Pitfalls.

What are the steps in searching? ›

The search process can be summarized in the following 6 steps:
  1. Define the subject/question/problem.
  2. Choose search tool(s)
  3. Build a search query.
  4. Do the search.
  5. Evaluate the search result.
  6. Re-search.
Feb 7, 2023

What are the five key points in searching literature? ›

To complete a thorough literature search you should:
  • define what you are searching for.
  • decide where to search.
  • develop a search strategy.
  • refine your search strategy.
  • save your search for future use.

How to do a literature search example? ›

What is a literature search?
  1. Define your research question(s) ...
  2. Choose a database to use to carry out your search(es) ...
  3. Design your search strategy/ keywords according to the resource being used. ...
  4. Conduct search(es), evaluate results. ...
  5. Refine search strategy and repeat as necessary. ...
  6. Keep a record of your searches.
Nov 22, 2022

What are the 6 stages of a literature search? ›

  • Define your search question. Text. ...
  • Think about the search terms to use. Text. ...
  • Decide how to combine the concepts. Text. ...
  • Think about any limits you want to apply. Text. ...
  • Decide which literature databases to use. Text. ...
  • Manage your references. Text.

What is a successful search strategy? ›

A good search strategy will include: Key concepts and meaningful terms. Keywords or subject headings. Alternative keywords. Care in linking concepts correctly.

What are keywords in search strategy? ›

Keywords, also commonly called search terms, are the words that you enter into the database search boxes. They represent the main concepts of your research topic and are the words used in everyday life to describe the topic.

Why develop a search strategy? ›

Complete search strategy: The complete search strategy should be included so that the reader can assess the quality of the search and, thus, the quality of the review. Inadequate searches or errors in search strategies can affect the quality of the review and lead to bias.

What makes a good literature search? ›

Narrow and refine your search results by:

year of publication or date range (for recent or historical research) document or source type (e.g. article, review or book) subject or keyword (for relevance). Try repeating your search using the 'subject' headings or 'keywords' field to focus your search.

What is the first step in conducting a literature search? ›

The very first step in a literature review is deciding what it is you will be researching. Your research question defines the entirety of your final piece of work, including the literature review. It should focus on something from the research field that needs to be explored, where there are gaps in the information.

How many steps are there in an effective literature search? ›

Five steps for literature search success

You may discover more along the way, but these steps will provide a good foundation. Plan using PICO(T) to develop your clinical question and formulate a search strategy. Identify a database to search. Conduct your search in one or more databases.

What is the first step in constructing a search strategy? ›

The first step in developing your search strategy is identifying the key concepts your research question covers. A preliminary search is often done to understand the topic and to refine your research question.

What are the six basic search techniques? ›

Search Techniques
  • Search Techniques.
  • Broad and narrow searches.
  • Search blocks.
  • Combining search words with Boolean operators (AND, OR and NOT)
  • Searching for part of words (truncation)
  • Searching for phrases (quotation marks)
  • Simple and advanced search forms.
  • Improving your search.
Oct 30, 2023

What is the first step in strategic searching? ›

Students should recall the following five steps:
  • SELECT research questions.
  • EXTRACT keywords and terms.
  • APPLY search strategies.
  • RUN your search.
  • CHART your search.

What are the 4 criteria for evaluating search strategy algorithm? ›

You will recall that we defined four criteria that we are going to use to measure various search strategies; these being completeness, time complexity, space complexity and optimality. In terms of those, breadth-first search is both complete and optimal.

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