Search strategies are critical components of evidence synthesis research and are:
documented and described in the Methods section of published reviews
included as an Appendix in published reviews
Follow guidance from PRISMA on how to report search strategies in a systematic review:
Rethlefsen, M.L., Kirtley, S., Waffenschmidt, S. et al. PRISMA-S: an extension to the PRISMA Statement for Reporting Literature Searches in Systematic Reviews. Syst Rev 10, 39 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13643-020-01542-z
Key evidence synthesis organizations (IOM, Cochrane, CIHR, Campbell Collaboration) highlight the importance of librarian expertise in developing search strategies which are:
Expect an iterative process, beginning with preliminary searching before developing a final comprehensive search strategy.
You will develop a sophisticated combination of keywords, subject headings, search syntax and logic operators to retrieve the optimal number of studies for an evidence synthesis project
A search strategy must include both keywords and subject headings to be comprehensive and avoid these pitfalls:
Documentation and tutorials for core and common subject resources
Systematic review database searching cheat sheet - health focus
The John W. Scott Health Sciences Library at the University of Alberta has developed a freely available online course called Introduction to Systematic Review Searching:
The John W. Scott Health Sciences Library at the University of Alberta has developed a freely available online course called Introduction to Systematic Review Searching: