Library launches simple search tool
Launching into a quest for medical information requires that the searcher knows the relevant resources to explore. This can be a significant stumbling block, especially for busy clinicians who use online resources only occasionally. As part of the College’s new web site, the library has implemented a simple search tool that helps physicians discover valuable clinical information quickly without necessarily knowing the intricacies of a database’s interface or even of its existence.
This tool, known as a federated search engine, takes the form of search boxes displayed on various pages of the library’s web site. For example, on the library’s home page, the user enters a query into the search box and, with the click of the search button, the query is sent to numerous electronic resources, including bibliographic databases such as MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews; the library’s online catalogue; and selected web sites with high-quality material (e.g., clinical practice guidelines and patient information). Results are displayed by relevance. Whenever the results point to a journal article, links to the full text document are provided if the library subscribes to that journal. The federated search boxes on other pages of the library’s site are filtered to particular resources. For example, searching from the “books” page limits the results to electronic books to which the library subscribes as well as materials listed in the catalogue.
We envision this as a simple tool for uncovering high-quality material: Google-like ease but more precisely focused. College members are welcome to provide feedback using the survey on the library’s web site, www.cpsbc.ca/library.
—Linda Clendenning, Karen MacDonell, Judy Neill
Librarians/Co-Managers, CPSBC Library