3 research outputs found
Impact of PubMed search filters on the retrieval of evidence by physicians
R etrieving health literature is a cornerstone of evidence-based practice. With the rapid increase in available evidence, physicians can no longer rely on one or two key journals to stay current. Increasingly, physicians search bibliographic databases, such as PubMed, for research evidence, which is dispersed across hundreds of journals. Each year, physicians perform over 200 million searches in PubMed. 1,2 Physicians face challenges while searching PubMed and often miss relevant articles while retrieving too many nonrelevant articles. 3-6 Clinical decision-making based on evidence from a search may be impaired if relevant articles are missed. Retrieving many nonrelevant articles impedes the efficiency of searching. Improved search strategies are therefore necessary to retrieve a manageable amount of information. The use of PubMed search filters may help solve this problem. Filters are objectively derived, pretested strategies optimized to help users efficiently retrieve articles for a specific purpose
Measures of frailty in population-based studies: An overview
Although research productivity in the field of frailty has risen exponentially in recent years, there remains a lack of consensus regarding the measurement of this syndrome. This overview offers three services: first, we provide a comprehensive catalogue of current frailty measures; second, we evaluate their reliability and validity; third, we report on their popularity of use