Search Strategy
The aim of the search strategy is to maximise the retrieval of relevant documents and minimise the retrieval of irrelevant material. It is necessary to strike a balance between achieving comprehensiveness and maintaining relevance when developing a search strategy.
Inappropriate/ inadequate search strategies may fail to identify records that may affect the comprehensiveness of your review. Below are some of the pointers for building a simple and effective search.
1. PICO
PICO is used to formulate a search statement. It is not necessary to include all of the PICO concepts in the search strategy.
Although a research question may address particular populations, settings or outcomes, these concepts may not be well described in the title or abstract of an article or indexed with the controlled vocabulary terms. For a basic search, it is preferably to search for concepts that can be clearly defined and translated into search terms.
2. Search tips
Boolean logic ( "AND" "OR" and "NOT") is used to express the relationships between search terms.
3. Restrictions
Restrictions are not advisable for:
4. Revising your search strategy
Search strategy should be revised when
5. When to stop searching
Generally, if your search strategy has no longer retrieved new studies or relevant articles, this means your search has reached the saturation point. The call to abort searching further depends on the significance of the research question, the purpose of the review and the resources that are available.
An Evidence Based Checklist for the Peer Review of Electronic Search Strategies (PRESS EBC) is available here.
Here are some factors to consider when constructing your search statements (adapted from PRESS):
Translation |
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Operators |
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Subject headings |
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Natural language |
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Spelling & syntax |
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Limits |
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Database adaptations |
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