Literature Search Strategy
Literature Search Strategy
Appendix 2A
Medline was selected for the initial literature search, on the general theme of
value in health library services. Medline was chosen because it indexes the
healthcare library journals most likely to publish relevant articles. A mix of
medical subject headings (MeSH) and text words was used. Medline is
primarily a healthcare database so, unlike LISA, the thesaurus does not
include detailed subject headings for library and information studies research.
The specific subject coverage of Medline also means that broad library
subject headings can be used effectively. MeSH Library Science OR
Libraries were selected, which covered a number of synonyms. The terms
were exploded but not limited in any way. This very broad search retrieved a
set of 458522.
Text words were added to retrieve the most relevant articles from this set:
impact OR value appearing only in the title field. This was judged a very
specific search strategy, as the most relevant articles would probably use at
least one of those words in the title. It was recognised that the search was not
sensitive, as synonyms were not used, and relevant articles would be missed.
It was decided that recent, relevant articles would cite key articles that the
search missed.
The search retrieved 95 documents, of which only 14 were considered most
relevant. The text word impact retrieved numerous irrelevant papers about
journal impact studies. To avoid language bias, the search was not limited to
English, and as titles appear in translation in Medline, the English text words
would not have excluded foreign language papers.
Search History:
1. MEDLINE; exp LIBRARIES/ OR exp LIBRARY SCIENCE/; 458,522 results.
2. MEDLINE; (value OR impact).ti; 141974 results.
3. MEDLINE; 1 AND 2; 95 results.
A further search was run after the study had taken place to identify articles
published since 2003. This search attempted to replicate the sensitive search
strategy used in the Weightman review (Weightman & Williamson, 2005), and
used their search terms in Embase and Medline, limited to items with a
publication date since 2003 (the latest date from the original review).
1. MEDLINE; (((Performance ADJ indicator* OR performance ADJ measure* OR
performance ADJ standard* OR impact OR value) AND (Health* ADJ librar* OR
medical ADJ librar* OR postgraduate ADJ centre ADJ librar* OR hospital ADJ
librar* OR nursing ADJ librar* OR information ADJ service* OR virtual ADJ librar*
OR electronic ADJ librar* OR electronic ADJ information))).ti,ab [Limit to:
Publication Year 2003-2009]; 130 results in Medline, 103 in Embase. Four relevant
articles, no new evidence.
This search retrieved a large number of irrelevant articles, of which four were
relevant (Weightman, Urquhart, Spink, & Thomas, 2009; Medernach &
Franco, 2007; Marshall, 2007; Cullen, & Essen, 2007) but no information was
identified that would have altered this study.
The review search terms were too broad for searching LISA, the library and
information database, so the search was for the text words value OR impact
OR contribution in the title field only. This retrieved one further article (He,
Chaudhuri & Juterbock, 2009), which added to the evidence that outcome
evaluation, rather than traditional output measures were needed to show the
value of the library service.
LISA Search Query: TI=(value or impact or contribution) retrieved 224 articles
TI=(value or impact or contribution) and not
TI=(journal or journals) and DE=(medical or health) retrieved 10
One additional article