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Dentistry: Search for articles (using databases)

Created by Health Science Librarians

Finding Full-Text Articles (Find @ UNC)

Click on the Find @ UNC button button in database results to:

  • Go directly to most online articles
  • Export article citations to Endnote or to formats for other reference managers
  • Use Google Scholar or the Google Scholar Button browser add-in to find free full text.
  • Search the UNC-CH Library Catalog to find the print journal
  • Send an Interlibrary Loan (ILL) request if the journal is not owned by UNC-CH

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Dentistry Librarian

Profile Photo
Emily Jones, MLIS, AHIP
she/her/hers
Asklib.hsl.unc.edu can provide help through email, chat, or phone
Contact:
epjones3@email.unc.edu
(919) 966-0963
Health Sciences Library
335 S. Columbia Street
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7585

*Please note, I have a hybrid work schedule and the days I work on-campus vary each week. Please email for my next on-campus availability, or schedule a virtual meeting directly on my calendar any time by clicking the button above.

ORCID iD icon orcid.org/0000-0002-4294-7564

Searching for a specific article

Often, the quickest way to find a specific article is to search for the Article Title in a database like PubMed or Google Scholar and then use the Find @ UNC option to go to the full-text article.

Always connect to databases from UNC-CH Library pages so you will see the Find @ UNC button.

Look for this article:
Authors Wardrop PJ, Ravichandran S, Hair M, Robertson SM, Sword D. Article Title Do wind and brass players snore less? A cross-sectional study of snoring and daytime fatigue in professional orchestral musicians. Journal Title Clinical Otolaryngology. Year & Month 2011 Apr; Volume & Issue 36(2): Pages 134-8.

  • To search PubMed, use the search box on the HSL Homepage. Use the Find @ UNC button on the PubMed results page to look for the full-text article.

  • To search Google Scholar, use the link in the Quick Link box below the search box on the HSL homepage. Use the Find @ UNC link on the Google Scholar results page to look for the full-text article.

 

Searching by topic

Search for Synthesized or Filtered Information

Step 1: Determine if there is a guideline or evidence summary addresses your question.

Study Design Definition Resources to Consult
Guidelines

"Developed by an expert panel, clinical practice guidelines critically appraise, summarize, and interpret recent and relevant clinical evidence to provide recommendations that can be applied to patient care" (American Dental Association).

Also referred to as: clinical guideline, clinical practice guideline.

  1. Epistemonikos
  2. Trip
  3. Dynamed

Step 2: If no guideline addresses your question, search for a meta-analysis or systematic review.

Study Design Definition Resources to Consult
Meta-analysis Meta-analysis is the statistical combination of results from two or more separate studies. They are systematic reviews taken one step further by pooling, or combining, the data of similar studies to improve precision, to answer questions not posed by individual studies, or to settle controversies from conflicting studies (Cochrane Handbook of Systematic Reviews.
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
  2. PubMed
  3. Epistimonikos
Systematic Review A systematic review is a literature review that gathers all of the available evidence matching pre-specified eligibility criteria to answer a specific research question. It uses explicit, systematic methods, documented in a protocol, to minimize bias, provide reliable findings, and inform decision-making (Cochrane Handbook of Systematic Reviews.
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
  2. PubMed
  3. Epistimonikos

Search for Primary Studies

Step 3: If unable to locate a guideline, meta-analysis or systematic review that addresses your question, then search for primary studies by clinical question type. Follow the evidence pyramid for study design preference.

Type of Question/Need Resources to Consult
Therapy/Prevention (General)
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
  2. Trip
  3. PubMed
Therapy/Prevention (Drug Therapy)
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
  2. Trip
  3. Embase
  4. PubMed
Harm/Etiology
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
  2. Trip
  3. PubMed
Diagnosis
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
  2. Trip
  3. PubMed
Prognosis
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
  2. Trip
  3. PubMed
Rarely or newly published topic
  1. Google Scholar
  2. Scopus (Consider performing forward citation searches in Scopus and/or Google Scholar.)
  3. Grey literature

Adapted from Stellrecht, E & Booth HA. (2019). Searching for the best oral health evidence: strategies, tips, and resources. In: Carrasco-Labra A, Brignardello-Petersen R, Glick M, Azarpazhooh A, & Guyatt G, eds.  How to Use Evidence-Based Dental Practices to Improve Clinical Decision-Making. American Dental Association.


Evidence Pyramid

Evidence, or the literature, is made up of both research and non-research publications. Evidence is grouped in a pyramid, or hierarchy, where the best or strongest type is found at the top and lowest or weaker is found at the bottom. As the quality of the information increases, the amount of available literature on that topic decreases, hence the pyramid structure.

Broadly, publications can be separated into 3 groups:

  1. Non-research (expert opinion, editorials, narrative reviews)
  2. Primary studies (further divided into experimental or observational studies)
  3. Synthesized or filtered information (guidelines, meta-analyses, systematic reviews)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jones, E.P. (2023). Evidence pyramid [image].

Guidelines

Databases

More information on searching Cochrane Library can be found here.

More information on searching PubMed can be found here.

Tips for limiting PubMed results by study design:

  • Meta-analysis
  1. Enter search words for the clinical question
  2. On the results page, select Meta-Analysis under Article Types in the left-hand filters sidebar
  • Systematic Reviews
  1. Enter search words for the clinical question
  2. On the results page, select Systematic Reviews under Article Types in the left-hand filters sidebar
  • Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)
  1. Enter search words for the clinical question
  2. On the results page, select Randomized Controlled Trial under Article Types in the left-hand filters sidebar
  • Cohort Studies
  1. Enter search words for the clinical question
  2. Add Cohort Studies[MeSH] to the search words
  • Case-Control Studies
  1. Enter search terms for the clinical question
  2. Add Case-Control Studies[Mesh] to the search words

More information on searching Embase can be found here.

More information on searching CINAHL can be found here.

More information on searching Scopus can be found here.