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NUR3165_D Harper: 4. MEDLINE

MEDLINE

All of the databases are accessible from the Articles & Databases page. http://library.ucf.edu/Databases

All databases require remote access through the library’s EZProxy. http://library.ucf.edu/Databases/OffCampus.asp

General Information:

Medline is the major medical database from the National Library of Medicine covering the fields of medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, the health care system, and the preclinical sciences. Medline contains citations and abstracts from more than 4,800 biomedical journals published in the United States and 70 other countries. The database contains over 14 million citations dating back to the mid-1960’s. Coverage is worldwide, but most records are from English-language sources or have English abstracts.

Because the UCF Library buys access to several versions of Medline from different companies, you have a choice of different versions to search. You may search PubMed, the free version of Medline, or Medline from Ebscohost or CSA.

If you decide to search PubMed, be sure and log in through the library’s EZProxy using your library number and select PubMed from the library’s list of databases. Even though PubMed is free to the public and accessible without your library number, if you log in through the UCF Library, you will have links and access to all of the library’s full text journals.

Search Tips:

Medline via Ebscohost
The search screen for Medline via Ebscohost will be exactly like the search screen as Cinahl, and thus, all search tips for Cinahl will apply to Medline. To learn more about searching Medline via Ebscohost, consult the Cinahl section of this module.

PubMed
PubMed is the free version of Medline. The following are search tips for PubMed:

Use the Sign In at the top of the screen to create an account to save citations and search strategies.

Enter your search terms into the search box at the top of the screen. There is no advanced search box. If you need to enter synonyms or related terms, structure your search similar to this one:
(stress or anxiety) and (burnout or job satisfaction) and nursing

Never use a truncation or a word variation symbol. In other databases, an asterisk is usually used to search for the variations of words. In PubMed, the database will search for related terms as long as you DO NOT use the asterisk.

Use the Limits tab to search by author or journal.

Never check the full text boxes in the Limits area. Remember that clicking on full text may exclude citations where full text is available in another database (one not provided by PubMed) that can be identified by clicking the “Get Full Text” icon.

Use the Limits area to narrow your search by date, language, gender, age, type of article, and subset of the database

Once you have a results list, use the Related Articles link to find additional articles of interest

To locate the full text of an article, click on the author to see the abstract view of the article. Links to full text may appear here. If not, use the “Get Full Text” icon.

Check off citations of interest, then use the Send To pull-down menu, to send the citations to a Text file, Printer, Clipboard or Email. The Clipboard is like a folder that will hold your citations until you are ready to work with them.

For More Help:

Consult the Help/FAQ and Tutorials provided by PubMed on the left side of the screen. You may also seek help from the Ask a Librarian service. For hours of operation and phone numbers: http://library.ucf.edu/Ask. A toll free phone number is available.