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*Pharmacy

This guide provides access to information resources on pharmacy and pharmacy practice to support your learning and research.

What's On This Page?

On this page you'll find tips for evaluating your search results and the sources you choose to use. 

Evaluate Your Results

Check if a result is worth your time before you read it. Use clues in the database or search engine to decide if you should read it.

  • Check for relevant words (databases and search engines often put these in bold font)
    • The title
    • The journal, book, or website it is in
    • The keywords or subjects listed for that result
    • The abstract, summary, or snippet
  • Look at the publication date. Is that result current enough?
  • Review the length. Is it too short to be useful? Is it longer than you have time to understand?
  • Check for unusually high numbers in the "Cited By" tool that some databases and search engines have. Those articles might be seminal or landmark articles. Or, those articles might be examples of problematic studies. Investigate to find out!

Get Your Source

Looking for the full text?  Either of the following symbols will take you to the full text of your item:

PDFor  Get Full Text (MCPHS)

If the item you want is not available directly from MCPHS:

  • Check to see if the item is freely available online. Use the links in the "Try to get a free / open access version" section.
  • Is the item you are searching for not in our collections and not freely available online?  Book chapters and articles not available from MCPHS’ print and digital collections can often be obtained from other libraries via our Interlibrary Loan (ILL) service. Requests for Interlibrary Loans can be made by submitting this form, or by accessing the “Get Full Text” links from citations available from our databases. This service is provided for MCPHS faculty, staff, and students only. 

Read a Detailed Record

Check out the example of a detailed record below.  This example has certain terms circled to highlight information that you'll want to look for when you're evaluating an article.

Tips to Remember:

  • Start with the title and work your way down through publication type, subjects, abstract, journal subset and instrumentation.
  • The author(s), journal and database want you to know what the article is. They aren't trying to trick you.
  • Reviews are reviewing the research, so when you're looking at publication type if you see review AND research, review usually takes precedence.
  • Mixed methods research uses qualitative AND quantitative, so remember to check for both. 
  • Are there other assignment criteria for the article you're evaluating? Don't forget those too!
  • Think you've found an article that works?  Remember to read the whole article to be certain!

Screen shot of detailed record and abstract with important features circled.

How Do I...?

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