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Liberating the literature

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Relationships

I came across a nice site, Visual Thesaurus, which is unfortunately not free-access! But offers a few trial goes. It reminded me of the TouchGraph feature in HubMed. I’m not sure how useful these things are, but they interest me.

I’m still keen on introducing a relationship function on the TRIP Database. I see it working like Amazon’s ‘People who bought this….’. So it’s be something like ‘People who viewed this article also looked at these’. However, as with the visualisation features above I’m not sure how useful it’d be!

Popular Papers – March 2006

Below are the top ten papers reached via the TRIP Database for March 2006.

1) Abdominal ultrasound in the diagnosis of childhood appendicitis (BestBets)
2) Geriatric Care and Treatment (SBU)
3) Osteoporosis (Patient UK)
4) Routine antenatal care for healthy pregnant women (NICE/RCOG)
5) If a patient with osteoporosis is unable to take calcium supplements, are bisphosphonates as effective as when a patient is able to take calcium supplements? (NLH Q&A Service)
6) Day Case Laproscopic Cholecystectomy (British Association of Day Surgery)
7) Evaluation of the patient with sore throat, earache, and sinusitis: an evidence based approach (DARE)
8) Burkitt Lymphoma (eMedicine)
9) Acute Pain Management (National Health and Medical Research Council)
10) Effective Medical Treatment of Opiate Addiction (NIH Consensus Statement)

I was pleased to see a NLH Q&A Service answer in the top ten – shows other people are, at least, interested in them. In March over 3,000 visits to NLH Q&A Service answers were ‘facilitated’ by the TRIP Database.

LactMed

An interesting site spotted by Ben (NHS eLibraries blog) – LactMed. Its a site dedicated to drugs to which might have an effect of drugs taken during lactation. I’m sure it’s very useful although one search for simvastatin returned a record whose first sentence was “No relevant published information exists on the use of lovastatin during breastfeeding

A UK related site is the UKMI (UK Medicines Information) site Drugs in lactation

Adding peer-reviewed material

Does it have a role in TRIP? Dean Giustini’s re-named blog serves up more food for thought. He highlights 5 main sources of medical information:

1) Medline – core
2) Big four (BMJ, JAMA, NEJM, Lancet) – inner core
3) High impact factor journals
4) Embase – alternative core
5) EBM material.

TRIP definately does 5 – that’s its main purpose. We also have created an automatic search of PubMed that covers 1, 2 and 3. I don’t think we can do much about 4.

However, the medline coverage is not ‘core’ to TRIP, it’s bolted on as a separate search. Can we integrate both systems? A few years back we had a separate category called ‘primary research’ where we incorporated 25(ish) journals, big 4, AMA, BMJPG journals and select others. The criticism we received related to potential publication bias. ‘Hooking up’ to PubMed allowed us to improve the coverage and save ourselves much time.

Is it time to consider re-integrating some primary research articles into the main search? I’m thinking of how it might work to incorporate the ‘inner core’ of medical journals. It would be relatively straightforward. However, it raises the main issue pre-occupying the current development workload at TRIP – weighting and the search algorithm. Where would a 2006 journal article appears relative to a 2003 Cochrane SR, a 2004 clinical guideline or a 2005 clinical question?

Search habits

Not sure how applicable these results are to medical search….

“The study found that 62 percent of search users click on a link within the first results’ page, up from 60 percent in 2004 and 48 percent four years ago. Additionally, nearly all searchers–90 percent–click on a link within the first three pages, up from 87 percent two years ago and 81 percent in 2002.”

“When researchers asked users at what point they either revised their queries or moved to another search engine, 16 percent replied that they did so after reviewing the first few entries, and 25 percent said after the first page. An additional 27 percent changed either their queries or search engines after the first two pages, while 20 percent did so after three pages; just 12 percent stayed with the search terms and/or engine beyond three pages.”

See here for more details.

Windows Live Academic

WLA (or WLAS or MAS or MLAS?) has been released (click here). Disappointed to see it doesn’t cover medicine as yet. It’s only available as a beta-version and covers “computer science, physics, electrical engineering, and related subject areas.”

Fewer charges for website content

The TRIP Database moving to free access appears part of a larger trend in freeing-up content across the internet. See this BBC news article (click here)

Microsoft Academic Search

See Dean’s blog on the ‘rival’ to Google Scholar (link in side-bar) …

But what will Dean call his blog (currently Google Scholar Blog)?

Wi-fi

Google has been chosen to provide free wi-fi access to San Francisco (Click here). It reminded me of a time, farily recently, when a large American publishing house approached TRIP with a view to potentially buying ‘us’. One of the main stumbling blocks related to our inability to store our records on a PDA. I suggested that it won’t be long before most places will be wi-fi enabled allowing ‘live’ searching of TRIP. They weren’t convinced! San Francisco’s plans seem to be a major step forward in this direction.

The storing of databases on a PDA reminds me of when Medline was available on a load of CDs. Who would go back to that arrangement now you can search on a live updated version (via PubMed or HubMed)?

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