Once you have a well-formulated clinical question, you should create a search strategy. If you need assistance with this step, please refer to the Develop your research skills page for more information.
Now that you have a strategy, where should you begin searching?
There are several ways to find literature via the Murdoch Library.
Which is best for finding a particular article? How do you research a particular discipline?
To discover when you should use which resource, refer to the below:
Library Search is the easiest way to search the Library’s print and digital resources from a single search box. Library Search will also search databases the Library subscribes to for digital resources (these include articles, conference papers, videos, etc.).
It is a quick way to locate items you may already have details about and a useful tool when you need to find high quality resources on a topic.
See the video below for more details.
If a particular book, article or other resource is not held in the University Library, you can request it from another library.
Databases are more comprehensive and are therefore preferred over Library Search to find specialised information in your subject area.
Academic databases are online repositories or collections of scholarly and academic resources, such as journals and journal articles, conference papers, theses, ebooks, streaming media and other types of academic publications which may not be accessible via a general internet search.
These databases are specifically designed to help researchers, students, and academics access reliable and peer-reviewed information for their studies and research projects.
Use databases to conduct in-depth searching within a specific field or subject area.
Use the below link to search databases by title, or select from subject-specific lists.
For more help on how to use databases in your research:
If you locate a particular book, article or other resource that is only available as an abstract or citation, you can request the Library gain access for you and we will advise further:
Google Scholar is not a substitute for databases but can be useful when you need a quick and broad overview of a topic, when you are conducting interdisciplinary research, or when you want free and easily accessible content. It is user-friendly and provides citation metrics. See the video below for more details.
Now when you search for articles in Google Scholar, you will see a link to Findit@Murdoch to the right of the item result if the articles are in our collection.
From these results, you can determine the title of the journal the articles or studies are published in. You can then search Ulrichsweb to check if the article is from a peer-reviewed journal.
For further Google Scholar assistance, see our series of YouTube videos:
PubMed is the freely accessible online database of biomedical journal citations and abstracts created by the U.S. National Library of Medicine. MEDLINE is its largest component but it includes other resources.
The Library has access to MEDLINE from both the Web of Science and Ovid platforms. These databases provide more sophisticated search functionality. They also show the FindIt@Murdoch links in their results so that you can access content using the Library's subscription databases.
If you have consulted all the provided resources and your literature search is not resulting in relevant results, you can Ask our Librarians to review your search words and search strings.
Please include information about your topic, synonyms, search strings, and databases searched.
When you have located and collated the resources you require to answer your clinical question, you need to appraise the resources for reliability.
Beginner study and research support:
Intermediate and advanced research support:
Access resources provided by Murdoch University Library: