Searching for Evidence

Searching for published research literature in any discipline requires skills and knowledge about where and how to search. Yet the field of palliative care offers its own challenges:

  • The literature is 'diffuse', ie, there are wide ranges of topics of interest to, but not the sole domain of, palliative care.
  • Relevant literature lies not only in the specialty palliative journals, but also in general journals. It is also found in domains outside of biomedicine, such as psychology, theology, philosophy, ethics, sociology (each with their own databases).
  • As an emerging field, the nomenclature (the language it uses) takes time to develop. There may be a lack of consistent terminology and descriptiveness in manuscripts.
  • Authors (especially those outside of palliative care) may not nominate palliative care subject headings in the editorial process, nor use language, in writing an article itself, to identify it as being of interest to palliative care.
  • Some relevant questions in palliative care are difficult to answer using randomised controlled trials, or have not yet been formally studied. The best available evidence may lie in unpublished papers, reports and theses, or else be published in journals not indexed in databases such as PubMed.
Watch video discussing the importance of CareSearch to clinicians

Video - What does CareSearch mean to clinicians?

 

Various pages in CareSearch are designed to help you search well despite these factors.

Last updated 28 February 2017