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[indices] Free text Medline searching
- From: "INDICES Moderator" <indices@healthnet.org>
- Date: Fri, 13 May 2005 10:29:16 -0400
E-DRUG: free text medline searching
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[This exchange in HIF-NET might be interesting for those e-druggers who want
to search Medline, the biggest free database of published literature. WB]
Dear Madeleine,
Thanks for the alert on ASkMedline. The URL is:
http://askmedline.nlm.nih.gov/ask/ask.php
and there is an interesting variant, the PICO
http://askmedline.nlm.nih.gov/ask/pico.php
which gets you to formulate the question by population, intervention,
comparator and outcome then specify the type of publication you'd like.
Paul Glasziou
paul.glasziou@dphpc.ox.ac.uk
[HIF-net profile: Paul Glasziou is a general practitioner and director of
the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, Oxford, UK. He is also co-editor
of 'Evidence-Based Medicine', a journal which alerts clinicians to
important advances in internal medicine, general and family practice,
surgery, psychiatry, paediatrics, and obstetrics and gynaecology.
'Evidence-Based Medicine' is published by the BMJ Publishing Group and is
available free to developing countries via HINARI. www.cebm.net
paul.glasziou@dphpc.ox.ac.uk
On 12/03/2005, Madeleine Decker, Mozambique wrote:
[Dear ALL]
Here is an article of interest.
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askMEDLINE: a free-text, natural language query tool for MEDLINE/PubMed
<http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1472-6947-5-5.pdf>
Plain language search tools for MEDLINE/PubMed are few. We wanted to
develop a search tool that would allow anyone using a free-text, natural
language query and without knowing specialized vocabularies that an expert
searcher might use, to find relevant citations in MEDLINE/PubMed. This
tool would translate a question into an efficient search.
askMEDLINE might be a useful search tool for clinicians, researchers, and
other information seekers interested in finding current evidence in
MEDLINE/PubMed. The text-only format could be convenient for users with
wireless handheld devices and those with low-bandwidth connections in
remote locations.
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Regards,
Madeleine
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