Recap: Following the completion of searching for the first concept (Atorvastatin), it is necessary to build additional searches for memory loss and females. Again, you can start a new search for each of these concepts within PubMed without losing your initial search for Atorvastatin; this search is saved in your history for 12 hours. In the section directly after this one ("Search Step #6: Combining Search Elements Using AND"), we will learn how to combine all three concepts, but for now, let's build search strings for the second and third PICO elements.
If you happen to be in PubMed because of the previous search on Atorvastatin, then you will need to return to the MeSH database. This can be done by returning to the PubMed landing page. Here's a recap of how to reach the MeSH database from the landing page: To access this database from the UD version of PubMed home screen, select the following link pictured below (labeled "MeSH Database"). Note that it is important to start from UD's custom homepage so that you can access full-text results.
*note that the following instructions are not nearly as comprehensive as the instructions in steps 2-3 for Atorvastatin. If you need more guidance, please return to steps to 2 and 3 and simply replace the MeSH term Atorvastatin with "memory disorders"
"Memory Disorders"[Mesh] OR "Memory Loss"[tiab] OR "Memory Disorder"[tiab] OR "Memory Disorders"[tiab] OR "Cognitive Retention Disorder"[tiab] OR "Cognitive Retention Disorders"[tiab] OR "Semantic Memory Disorder"[tiab] OR "Age Related Memory Disorder"[tiab] OR "Age Related Memory Disorders"[tiab] OR "Memory Deficit"[tiab] OR "Memory Deficits"[tiab]
*note that the following instructions are not nearly as comprehensive as the instructions in steps 2-3 for Atorvastatin. If you need more guidance, please return to steps to 2 and 3 and simply replace the MeSH term Atorvastatin with "women"
The following search string is the exact same as what is captured in the screen-capture above. Note the field tags after each keyword and the truncation used for the term that can be plural:
"Female"[Mesh] OR Female*[tiab] OR Women[tiab] OR Woman[tiab]
Once the MeSH term and the keywords (and synonyms) have all been entered and properly separated with OR Boolean operators, click on the button labeled "Search PubMed"
Upon clicking "Search PubMed," a list of results should come up, as can be seen in this screen-capture:
In the next section, we will learn how to combine all three concepts using the "AND" Boolean operator
This content was adapted from “HOW TO SEARCH IN BIOMEDICAL DATABASES” (created in 2021 at NEOMED Library) by Simon Robins, which is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.