Contact | |
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Research center | United States National Library of Medicine (NLM) |
Release date | January 1996 |
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Website | www |
PubMed is a free search engine accessing primarily the MEDLINE database of references and abstracts on life sciences and biomedical topics. The United States National Library of Medicine (NLM) at the National Institutes of Health maintains the database as part of the Entrez system of information retrieval.
From 1971 to 1997, MEDLINE online access to the MEDLARS Online computerized database primarily had been through institutional facilities, such as university libraries. PubMed, first released in January 1996, ushered in the era of private, free, home- and office-based MEDLINE searching. The PubMed system was offered free to the public starting in June 1997.
Content
In addition to MEDLINE, PubMed provides access to:
- older references from the print version of Index Medicus, back to 1951 and earlier
- references to some journals before they were indexed in Index Medicus and MEDLINE, for instance Science, BMJ, and Annals of Surgery
- very recent entries to records for an article before it is indexed with Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) and added to MEDLINE
- a collection of books available full-text and other subsets of NLM records
- PMC citations
- NCBI Bookshelf
Many PubMed records contain links to full text articles, some of which are freely available, often in PubMed Central and local mirrors such as UK PubMed Central.
Information about the journals indexed in MEDLINE, and available through PubMed, is found in the NLM Catalog.
As of 6 December 2018, PubMed has more than 29.1 million records
going back to 1966, selectively to the year 1865, and very selectively
to 1809; about 500,000 new records are added each year. As of the same
date, 13.1 million of PubMed's records are listed with their abstracts,
and 14.2 million articles have links to full-text (of which 3.8 million
articles are available, full-text for free for any user).
Approximately 12% of the records in PubMed correspond to cancer-related
entries, which have grown from 6% in the 1950s to 16% in 2016.
Other significant proportion of records correspond to "chemistry" (8.69%), "therapy" (8.39%), and "infection" (5%).
In 2016, NLM changed the indexing system so that publishers will
be able to directly correct typos and errors in PubMed indexed articles.
Characteristics
Standard searches
Simple searches on PubMed can be carried out by entering key aspects of a subject into PubMed's search window.
PubMed translates this initial search formulation and
automatically adds field names, relevant MeSH (Medical Subject Headings)
terms, synonyms, Boolean operators, and 'nests' the resulting terms
appropriately, enhancing the search formulation significantly, in
particular by routinely combining (using the OR operator) textwords and
MeSH terms.
The examples given in a PubMed tutorial demonstrate how this automatic process works:
Causes Sleep Walking is translated as ("etiology"[Subheading] OR "etiology"[All Fields] OR "causes"[All Fields] OR "causality"[MeSH Terms] OR "causality"[All Fields]) AND ("somnambulism"[MeSH Terms] OR "somnambulism"[All Fields] OR ("sleep"[All Fields] AND "walking"[All Fields]) OR "sleep walking"[All Fields])
Likewise,
soft
Attack Aspirin Prevention is translated as ("myocardial infarction"[MeSH Terms] OR ("myocardial"[All Fields] AND "infarction"[All Fields]) OR "myocardial infarction"[All Fields] OR ("heart"[All Fields] AND "attack"[All Fields]) OR "heart attack"[All Fields]) AND ("aspirin"[MeSH Terms] OR "aspirin"[All Fields]) AND ("prevention and control"[Subheading] OR ("prevention"[All Fields] AND "control"[All Fields]) OR "prevention and control"[All Fields] OR "prevention"[All Fields])
A new PubMed interface was launched in October 2009 and encouraged
the use of such quick, Google-like search formulations; they have also
been described as 'telegram' searches.
By default the results are sorted by Most Recent, but this can be
changed to Best Match, Publication Date, First Author, Last Author,
Journal, or Title.
Comprehensive searches
For
optimal searches in PubMed, it is necessary to understand its core
component, MEDLINE, and especially of the MeSH (Medical Subject
Headings) controlled vocabulary used to index MEDLINE articles. They may
also require complex search strategies, use of field names (tags),
proper use of limits and other features; reference librarians and search
specialists offer search services.
Journal article parameters
When
a journal article is indexed, numerous article parameters are extracted
and stored as structured information. Such parameters are: Article Type
(MeSH terms, e.g., "Clinical Trial"), Secondary identifiers, (MeSH
terms), Language, Country of the Journal or publication history
(e-publication date, print journal publication date).
Publication Type: Clinical queries/systematic reviews
Publication type parameter allows searching by the type of publication, including reports of various kinds of clinical research.
Secondary ID
Since
July 2005, the MEDLINE article indexing process extracts identifiers
from the article abstract and puts those in a field called Secondary
Identifier (SI). The secondary identifier field is to store accession
numbers to various databases of molecular sequence data, gene expression
or chemical compounds and clinical trial IDs. For clinical trials,
PubMed extracts trial IDs for the two largest trial registries:
ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT identifier) and the International Standard
Randomized Controlled Trial Number Register (IRCTN identifier).
See also
A
reference which is judged particularly relevant can be marked and
"related articles" can be identified. If relevant, several studies can
be selected and related articles to all of them can be generated (on
PubMed or any of the other NCBI Entrez databases) using the 'Find
related data' option. The related articles are then listed in order of
"relatedness". To create these lists of related articles, PubMed
compares words from the title and abstract of each citation, as well as
the MeSH headings assigned, using a powerful word-weighted algorithm.
The 'related articles' function has been judged to be so precise that
the authors of a paper suggested it can be used instead of a full
search.
Mapping to MeSH
PubMed
automatically links to MeSH terms and subheadings. Examples would be:
"bad breath" links to (and includes in the search) "halitosis", "heart
attack" to "myocardial infarction", "breast cancer" to "breast
neoplasms". Where appropriate, these MeSH terms are automatically
"expanded", that is, include more specific terms. Terms like "nursing"
are automatically linked to "Nursing [MeSH]" or "Nursing [Subheading]".
This feature is called Auto Term Mapping and is enacted, by default, in
free text searching but not exact phrase searching (i.e. enclosing the
search query with double quotes).
This feature makes PubMed searches more sensitive and avoids
false-negative (missed) hits by compensating for the diversity of
medical terminology.
My NCBI
The PubMed optional facility "My NCBI" (with free registration) provides tools for
- saving searches
- filtering search results
- setting up automatic updates sent by e-mail
- saving sets of references retrieved as part of a PubMed search
- configuring display formats or highlighting search terms
and a wide range of other options. The "My NCBI" area can be accessed from any computer with web-access.
An earlier version of "My NCBI" was called "PubMed Cubby".
LinkOut
LinkOut, a NLM facility to link (and make available full-text) local journal holdings. Some 3,200 sites (mainly academic institutions) participate in this NLM facility (as of March 2010), from Aalborg University in Denmark to ZymoGenetics in Seattle.
Users at these institutions see their institution's logo within the
PubMed search result (if the journal is held at that institution) and
can access the full-text. Link out is being consolodated with Outside
Tool as of the major platform update coming in the Summer of 2019.
PubMed Commons
In
2016, PubMed allows authors of articles to comment on articles indexed
by PubMed. This feature was initially tested in a pilot mode (since
2013) and was made permanent in 2016. In February 2018, PubMed Commons was discontinued due to the fact that "usage has remained minimal".
PubMed for handhelds/mobiles
PubMed/MEDLINE can be accessed via handheld devices, using for instance the "PICO" option (for focused clinical questions) created by the NLM. A "PubMed Mobile" option, providing access to a mobile friendly, simplified PubMed version, is also available.
askMEDLINE
askMEDLINE, a free-text, natural language query tool for MEDLINE/PubMed, developed by the NLM, also suitable for handhelds.
PubMed identifier
A PMID (PubMed identifier or PubMed unique identifier) is a unique integer value, starting at
1
,
assigned to each PubMed record. A PMID is not the same as a PMCID which
is the identifier for all works published in the free-to-access PubMed Central.
The assignment of a PMID or PMCID to a publication tells the
reader nothing about the type or quality of the content. PMIDs are
assigned to letters to the editor, editorial opinions, op-ed
columns, and any other piece that the editor chooses to include in the
journal, as well as peer-reviewed papers. The existence of the
identification number is also not proof that the papers have not been retracted for fraud, incompetence, or misconduct. The announcement about any corrections to original papers may be assigned a PMID.
Alternative interfaces
The National Library of Medicine leases the MEDLINE information to a number of private vendors such as Embase, Ovid, Dialog, EBSCO, Knowledge Finder and many other commercial, non-commercial, and academic providers. As of October 2008,
more than 500 licenses had been issued, more than 200 of them to
providers outside the United States. As licenses to use MEDLINE data are
available for free, the NLM in effect provides a free testing ground
for a wide range
of alternative interfaces and 3rd party additions to PubMed, one of a
very few large, professionally curated databases which offers this
option.
Lu
identifies a sample of 28 current and free Web-based PubMed versions,
requiring no installation or registration, which are grouped into four
categories:
- Ranking search results, for instance: eTBLAST; MedlineRanker; MiSearch;
- Clustering results by topics, authors, journals etc., for instance: Anne O'Tate; ClusterMed;
- Enhancing semantics and visualization, for instance: EBIMed; MedEvi.
- Improved search interface and retrieval experience, for instance, askMEDLINE BabelMeSH; and PubCrawler.
As most of these and other alternatives rely essentially on
PubMed/MEDLINE data leased under license from the NLM/PubMed, the term
"PubMed derivatives" has been suggested.
Without the need to store about 90 GB of original PubMed Datasets,
anybody can write PubMed applications using the eutils-application
program interface as described in "The E-utilities In-Depth: Parameters,
Syntax and More", by Eric Sayers, PhD.
Various citation format generators, taking PMID numbers as input, are
examples of web applications making use of the eutils-application
program interface. Sample web pages include Citation Generator - Mick Schroeder, Pubmed Citation Generator - Ultrasound of the Week, PMID2cite, and Cite this for me.
Data mining of PubMed
Alternative methods to mine the data in PubMed use programming environments such as Matlab, Python or R.
In these cases, queries of PubMed are written as lines of code and
passed to PubMed and the response is then processed directly in the
programming environment. Code can be automated to systematically
queries with different keywords such as disease, year, organs, etc. A
recent publication (2017) found that the proportion of cancer-related
entries in PubMed has risen from 6% in the 1950s to 16% in 2016.
The data accessible by PubMed can be mirrored locally using an unofficial tool such as MEDOC.