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Liberating the literature

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jrbtrip

Nice article on search Can we know everything?

The ATTRACT site contains a wonderful counter that counts how frequently an answer has been viewed. The top five being:

1) What are the risks of flying while pregnant?
2) Is there any information on the Novasure system for treating menorrhagia?
3) Should dianette (oral contraceptive pill) only be used for 3 months in treating acne?
4) Should you treat a low Ferritin (

A post on Dean Giustini’s blog highlights Wellcome’s invitation to tender for a UK version of PubMedCentral. See Dean’s blog (click here) for more information.

Dubious question time – “What is the difference between central and peripheral vertigo?”. Is that a clinical question or an essay question? We answered it (http://www.clinicalanswers.nhs.uk/index.cfm?question=2291). If it is an exam question (we’d prefer to think it wasn’t) I hope it gets good marks AND we’re referenced!!

Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)

A busy day for adding CAM articles. We already had numerous articles on the subject from the likes of Cochrane and Bandolier. However, we’ve now added records from:

  • The American National Centre for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
  • New Zealand Complementary and Alternative Medicine site (linked to the New Zealand Guideline Group)
  • Mayo Clinic ‘supplements’ (patient information)
  • UK Medicines Information have a small section.

We’ve also been busy adding patient information leaflets (PILS) – from the likes of PRODIGY (their new website launch has resulted in a near doubling of PILs), CancerBACUP and New Zealand Guideline Group’s consumer information.

This expansion of PILs is no doubt motivated by the free version of the site. Currently at the planning stage but more than likely they’ll be 3 separate searches – clinical information, medical images and patient information. These will be accessible in much the same way as google allows people to switch between searches for ‘web’, ‘images’, ‘groups’ etc. Essentially, a tab link above the search box.

TRIP Database – Free Access

Something wonderful happened today. We officially set in motion the road to free access to the TRIP Database. For various contractual reasons free access won’t start until 1st September 2006. However, we’re hoping to publish a ‘beta’ version of the free site ASAP (probably 3-4 months). The free version will actually be an enhancement on the current version – the next step in the evolution of the site. But, as mentioned, contractually we’re not able to push anything ‘official’ out until September.

When answering clinical questions we give a range of answers. Some are answered very well and others less well. If the evidence is there – great, if not the answers are less complete. Already, today, we’ve answered two questions at the different end of the spectrum.

The ‘good’ answer “Can you prescribe HRT for someone with focal migraines. If not what can be tried for her flushes? Also would HRT be advisable to protect her bones?” . This uses a number of evidence sources, principally PRODIGY. This answer links a number of separate sources of good evidence to ‘weave’ a ‘good’ answer.

The ‘bad’ answer “Can raised uric acid or gout could cause tinnitus?” We only found one reference in Medline and that was from Medical Hypotheses. So as we point our in our answer – it’s a hypothesis not evidence.

On one level the latter answer is bad. It’s bad as it doesn’t resolve the uncertainty for the GP. However, it’s an appropriate answer as that is the only evidence.

Popular Papers 2005

“Geriatric Care and Treatment: A systematic compilation of existing scientific literature” by The Swedish Council on Technology Assessment in Health Care was the most viewed paper, from the TRIP Database, in 2005.

Second was “National clinical guidelines for stroke Second edition” by the Royal College of Physicians and third, the NICE guideline on dyspepsia.

More stats… Around 50% of all our searches result in people going off to the filtered Medline articles. Around 5% of the time users personalise their Medline results by restricting to key journals in a specific area. TRIPwire (our search refinement tool) is used just under 2% of the time.

What do those figures suggest? Our users obviously really like the auto-searching of Medline. However, other features such as specialisation and TRIPwire are more ‘luxurious’!!

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