The Contributions of MEDLINE, Other Bibliographic Databases and Various Search Techniques to NICE Public Health Guidance

Authors

  • Paul Levay National Institute for Health and Care Excellence http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1784-3314
  • Michael Raynor National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
  • Daniel Tuvey National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18438/B82P55

Keywords:

Literature searching, Systematic review methodology, Public health guidance, MEDLINE, Grey literature

Abstract

Abstract

Objective – To make recommendations for the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) on the factors to consider when choosing databases and search techniques when producing systematic reviews to support public health guidance development.

Methods – Retrospective analysis of how the publications included in systematic reviews commissioned by NICE on obesity, spatial planning, and tuberculosis were retrieved. The

included publications were checked to see if they were found from searching MEDLINE, another database or through other search techniques.

Results – MEDLINE contributed 24.2% of the publications included in the obesity review, none of the publications in the spatial planning review and 72% of those in the tuberculosis review. Other databases accounted for 9.1% of included publications in obesity, 20% in spatial planning and 4% in tuberculosis. Non-database methods provided 42.4% of the included publications in the obesity review, compared to 5% in the spatial planning review and 24% in the tuberculosis review. It was not possible to establish retrospectively how 24.2% of the publications in the obesity review and 75% in the spatial planning review were found.

Conclusions – Topic-specific databases and non-database search techniques were useful for tailoring the resources to the review questions. The value of MEDLINE in these reviews was affected by the degree of overlap with clinical topics, the domain of public health, and the need to find grey literature. The factors that NICE considers when planning a systematic search are the multidisciplinary nature of public health and the different types of evidence required.

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Author Biographies

Paul Levay, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

Information Specialist

Michael Raynor, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

Information Specialist

Daniel Tuvey, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

Information Specialist

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Published

2015-03-06

How to Cite

Levay, P., Raynor, M., & Tuvey, D. (2015). The Contributions of MEDLINE, Other Bibliographic Databases and Various Search Techniques to NICE Public Health Guidance. Evidence Based Library and Information Practice, 10(1), 50–68. https://doi.org/10.18438/B82P55

Issue

Section

Research Articles

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