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- Record and Report your Search Strategy
Systematic and Scoping Reviews: Record and Report your Search Strategy
Keep track of your searches
Plan for success by keeping track of your searches!
- You may need to re-run your search close to publication in order to identify newer articles.
- You will need to report, at a minimum, your search strategy in your article. The publisher may also require that you provide your full search string for at least one database.
- You may wish to make all your search strings available as supplemental material.
Document Your Search Strategies
Keep track of your searching process in your preferred word-processing program. This will make it much easier to write your review. The better records you keep during this phase, the less stressful it will be to write your methods and results sections.
For your search in each database, record:
- database name and platform (Example: CINAHL Complete on EBSCOhost; PsycInfo on ProQuest)
- date the search was run
- years covered in the search
- exact search strategy used, including any filters
- number of records retrieved
Write Up your Search Methods
These resources provide guidance for how to report and write up your search process, including searches for grey literature.
- PRISMA for Searching: comprehensive guidance on how to report your search methods, including a checklist and full explanatory paper.
- Appendix 3: Documenting the Search Process in Systematic Reviews: CRD's guidance for undertaking reviews in health care. Centre for Reviews and Dissemination. January 2009.
- Searching for and Selecting Studies chapter of the Cochrane Handbook.
For additional models of search methodology reporting, refer to see other guidelines in Guides for Conducting Systematic Reviews.
- Last Updated: Nov 19, 2024 4:23 PM
- URL: https://libguides.gvsu.edu/SR