Skip to Main Content

Diabetes Education and Management

Developing your research question

Developing an answerable research question is a central part of conducting a systematic review. 

One of the search frameworks often used to help you formulate a clinical research question is the PICO model.

PICO stands for:

   Patient, Population or Problem
           What are the characteristics of the patient or population?
           What is the condition or disease you are interested in?

   Intervention or exposure
           What do you want to do with this patient (e.g. treat, diagnose, observe)?

   Comparison
           What is the alternative to the intervention (e.g. placebo, different drug, surgery)?

   Outcome
           What are the relevant outcomes (e.g. morbidity, death, complications)?

Other search frameworks:

ECLIPSE: Expectation, Client group, Location, Impact, Professionals, Service (focused on health policy information).

SPIDER: Sample, Phenomenon of Interest, Design, Evaluation, Research type (focused on qualitative and mixed methods primary research).

SPICESetting, Perspective (or Population), Intervention, Comparison, Evaluation (focused on the evaluation of specific interventions). 

It is important not to overlook this stage in the search process. Time spent identifying all possible synonyms and related terms for each of your PICO elements or concepts will ensure that your search retrieves as many relevant records as possible.

 - Think laterally about how others may describe the same concept
 - What terminology is used internationally?
 - Are there spelling differences in UK English and US English words?
 - Are there any colloquial terms or phrases used?
 - Check the search terms used in other papers or systematic reviews - other terms may be suggested from these.

It might be useful to check relevant dictionaries, encyclopedias and key texts for alternate terms.

Build a list of each of the search terms you identify. For example, if you were searching for:

 "Exercise-based rehabilitation for coronary heart disease"

Your list of synonyms and related terms might include:

   Exercise-based rehabilitation    Coronary heart disease

   rehabilitation
   exercise
   exercise therapy
   sports
   physical education
   exertion
   physical training
   aerobics
   kinesiotherapy

   coronary heart bypass
   myocardial ischemia
   myocardial infarction
   coronary disease
   coronary thrombosis

The definition of ‘truncation’ is to shorten or cut-off at the end. Truncation is used in database searches to ensure the retrieval of all possible variations of a search term.  All databases allow truncation, but the symbols used may vary, so it is best to check the database help for details.

Databases usually allow words to be truncated either at the end, or internally:

Truncating a word at the end ensures that all variations of the word, beginning with a specific root, will be retrieved. This is particularly useful for retrieving singular and plural versions of words.

Be careful not to truncate terms too early, or you may retrieve a high number of irrelevant documents.

Most databases use an asterisk (*) to find alternate endings for terms. For example:

therap* will retrieve therapy, therapies, therapists, therapeutic, therapeutical, etc.

 

Truncating a word internally ensures that any variations of spelling of a word can be retrieved. For example, pediatrics or paedetrics

Internal truncation is available in some databases, allowing you to search for alternate spellings of words - extremely useful when searching for American and English spellings of words.

For example, using the EBSCO databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, etc), a question mark included within a word can designate zero or one character in that place:

colo?r will retrieve either colour or color

Boolean Operators allow you to link terms together, either to widen a search or to exclude terms from your search results.

OR

 

Use to broaden your search, increasing the number of references retrieved. Use "OR" to search for synonyms and related terms for each concept within a research question.

For example, when searching for the concept "exercise based rehabilitation" you might use the following terms:
rehabilitation OR exercise OR exercise therapy OR sports OR exertion OR physical training OR aerobics OR kinesiotherapy

AND

Used to narrow a search, therefore decreasing the number of references.

For example, searching for:
coronary heart disease AND Australian Aboriginals

Would retrieve just those references covering both topics.

NOT

Used to narrow a search, therefore decreasing the number of references.
For example:

female NOT male

Would retrieve references dealing with females, but not those which discuss males. Caution should be exercised when using NOT, In the example above, research dealing with both females and males would be excluded from the search results.

 

Proximity Operators

Proximity (sometimes called “adjacency”) searching is similar to using Boolean operators in that you are specifying relationships between 2 or more terms. However, proximity searching allows you to specify the proximity of words to each other.

 
ADJACENCY

Some databases allow you to search for words within a specified number of words from each other.

For example:

physician adj3 relationship

Would retrieve physician patient relationship, patient physician relationship, or relationship of the physician to the patient.

 

Nesting

Nest search terms to control the logic of your search. For example:

(rehabilitation OR exercise OR exercise therapy OR sports OR physical training) AND (Coronary heart bypass OR myocardial ischemia OR myocardial infarction OR coronary disease OR coronary thrombosis)

Reproduced from: Bettany-Saltikov, J. (2010). Learning how to undertake a systematic review: Part 1. Nursing Standard, 24(40): p. 47-55.

Criteria Questions to ask Advice from Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions 
Time period Will your review be restricted by year of publication, or is it important that you cover all years? "Date restrictions should be applied only if it is known that relevant studies could only have been reported during a specific time period, for example if the intervention was only available after a certain time point."
Language Should you restrict to English language publications only? "Whenever possible review authors should attempt to identify and assess for eligibility all possibly relevant reports of trials irrespective of language of publication. No language restrictions should be included in the search strategy."
Publication type Are you restricting your search by publication type? "Format restrictions such as excluding letters are not recommended because letters may contain important additional information relating to an earlier trial report or new information about a trial not reported elsewhere."
Geographic considerations Are there any geographic considerations to include in your search strategy? For example, if you were researching Chinese herbal medicine you would need to consult Chinese literature.

Controlled vocabularies (such as the MESH subject headings used in Medline and EMTREE subject headings used in EMBASE) provide an organised approach to the way knowledge is described.

Their use is extremely important as they bring uniformity to the indexing of publications included within a database. Using the same terminology throughout a database creates consistency and precision and helps you to find relevant information no matter what terminology the author may have used within their publication.

Indexing is usually a manual process. Databases such as MEDLINE employ specially trained indexers to read the full-text of each publication then identify all of the concepts covered within the article. These concepts are then translated to the controlled vocabulary used within the database. It is the indexer’s job to ensure that each concept included in the article are identified and assigned a term.

Each database may use different subject headings to describe the same concept. As an example, the term “complementary medicine”:

The MESH heading (MEDLINE) is “complementary therapies”
The EMTREE heading (EMBASE) is “alternative medicine”
The CINAHL heading is “alternative therapies”

 

The EBSCO (MEDLINE, EMBASE, AMED, PsycINFO, etc) and CINAHL databases provide a search option to “explode” terms.  Exploded searches retrieve indexed records for a term, plus other terms which are a derivative (more specific, narrower terms) of the search term. Exploding search terms provides a fast way to find related concepts in a single search.

For example, if a search for "complementary therapies" in MEDLINE was exploded:

The search results would also include records  indexed with the MESH headings acupuncture”, “anthroposophy”, “auriculotherapy”, and so on.

NOTE: Clicking on a MESH heading will display its tree, including the exploded terms.

 

Keyword searches are extremely important when conducting systematic reviews, and should be used in combination with the relevant subject headings within each of your database searches:

  • Authors may not describe their methods or objectives well and indexers are not always experts in the subject areas
  • The available indexing terms might not correspond to the terms the searcher wishes to use (from Chapter 4, S1 Supplementary Material, Section 3.2, in Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions Version 6.2 (updated February 2021)).

Searching the Literature in Health Videos