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Searching for pediatric articles on Medline (October 26, 2006).
A recent publication
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Age-Specific Search Strategies for Medline. Monika Kastner, Nancy L Wilczynski, Cindy
Walker-Dilks, Kathleen Ann McKibbon, Brian Haynes. J Med Internet Res 2006 (Oct 25);
8(4):e25. [Full text]
examines search strategies for articles relevant to geriatric medicine, adult medicine,
pediatric medicine, neonatal medicine, and obstetrics. For studies of pediatric medicine, the
most sensitive search used the following terms:
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child:.mp. OR adolescent.mp. OR infan:.mp.
which had a sensitivity of 98% and a specificity of 81%. The colon after "child" tells
MedLine to search for any word beginning with "child." This allows you to search for either
"child" or "children". The .mp is a PubMed tag for multiple posting. It searches for terms
that appear in the title, abstract, or subject heading. The search that maximized specificity
was
which had a specificity of 97% but a sensitivity of only 58%. The .tw is a PubMed tag for
text word, and will search for a word appearing in a variety of locations.
Includes all words and numbers in the title, abstract, other abstract, MeSH terms,
MeSH Subheadings, Publication Types, Substance Names, Personal Name as Subject, MEDLINE
Secondary Source, and Other Terms (see Other Term [OT] above) typically non-MeSH subject
terms (keywords), including NASA Space Flight Mission, assigned by an organization other
than NLM.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=helppubmed.section.pubmedhelp.Search_Field_Descrip
The best compromise was
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adolescent.tw. OR children.tw. OR child, preschool.sh.
which produced 89% sensitivity and 87% specificity. The .sh is a PubMed tag for MeSH
subheading. MeSH is an acronym for Medical Subject Heading and represents an effort by the
coders at PubMed to classify the medical specialties associated with the article being
listed.
NLM's Medical Subject Headings controlled vocabulary of biomedical terms that is
used to describe the subject of each journal article in MEDLINE. MeSH contains more than
23,000 terms and is updated annually to reflect changes in medicine and medical
terminology. MeSH terms are arranged hierarchically by subject categories with more
specific terms arranged beneath broader terms. PubMed allows you to view this hierarchy
and select terms for searching in the MeSH Database. Skilled subject analysts examine
journal articles and assign to each the most specific MeSH terms applicable - typically
ten to twelve. Applying the MeSH vocabulary ensures that articles are uniformly indexed
by subject, whatever the author's words.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=helppubmed.section.pubmedhelp.Search_Field_Descrip
What does sensitivity and specificity mean in the context of a Medline search. The JMIR
article explains it thusly:
Sensitivity for a given age-specific topic is defined as the proportion of
relevant articles (ie, articles with the desired age-specific content) that are
retrieved; specificity is the proportion of nonrelevant articles (ie, articles that are
outside the desired age-specific content) not retrieved.
This webpage was written on 2006-10-26
and was last modified on
2008-07-08.
Category: Children in research,
Category: Information searching