Book an online appointment now

Book a one to one support appointment with a medicine librarian to discuss your project or research.

If you are doing a systematic review, please read our support policy on our Systematic reviews page before booking a consultation to understand which aspects of reviews and to what level we are able to provide reviewers.

If you wish to increase your skills in planning and managing systematic or research reviews and the advanced search methodologies needed for this type of research - see Systematic reviews.

NHS library members please contact your NHS support librarian.

Your librarians

Your librarians are here to support your learning, teaching and research and meet with individuals, teams or departments to provide tailored training.

They can help with:

  • Using the Library and our services
  • Searching and finding information
  • Evaluating the information you find
  • Using and connecting to e-journals, e-books and databases
  • Search strategies for literature reviews and systematic reviews 
  • Referencing and reference management software
  • Open access publishing  

Book a Library or Graduate School workshop

Library Services and the Graduate School run training programmes with workshops on digital and information skills, academic skills, writing, presenting, referencing and using LaTeX.

Literature searching skills

Literature searching tutorial 
This interactive, online tutorial will be suitable for anyone who needs an introduction or refresher on searching to support assignments and literature reviews in medicine and biomedicine.

  • The tutorial sections guide you through the process of doing a literature review; from creating your research question and search strategy, to searching a variety of databases, to exporting and managing the results you find
  • Once you are in the tutorial you can work your way through it sequentially or use the menu on the left of the screen to go directly to the lesson that you need

Systematic reviews

Systematic reviews - Searching tutorial

This interactive, online tutorial was designed for those conducting Systematic and Scoping Reviews. 

The tutorial sections guide you through the process of creating a focused research question, developing inclusion criteria, running an effective search strategy, finding grey literature, as well as exporting and managing the results.

Once you are in the tutorial you can work your way through it sequentially or use the menu on the left of the screen to go directly to the section that you need. 

If you would like to use any individual sections of this tutorial for teaching purposes please contact lib-med-liaison@imperial.ac.uk 

Full guidance on conducting a systematic review is available on our dedicated Systematic reviews page

Guides and tutorials for individual databases

Introduction to Ovid databases

This guide introduces the OVID databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycInfo and more) and their content and coverage.

It explains how to search with keywords and subject headings in the Ovid interface and how to use your search history to combine results with AND/OR. You will also learn how to best display and export your results as well as saving your searches and creating alerts.

The Ovid MEDLINE tutorial below acts as a good companion to this guide, with demonstrations of searching in the Ovid interface and prompts to practice in the database as you go through the sections.

Ovid MEDLINE

This tutorial guides you through how best to search and find full text in Ovid MEDLINE

  • You'll learn how to search using both keywords and subject headings, combine your search lines using Boolean commands like AND / OR and how to use more advanced search functions like truncation and wildcards, as well as how to find full text
  • There is also some material that will help you search in a more systematic and structured way - for example creating an answerable, focused search question

Introduction to CINAHL

CINAHL is our one subscription health database outside the Ovid platform. This guide covers beginner and advanced search functions in CINAHL and explains how to manage and export results. Other than the information about subject headings all these instructions are the same for other EBSCO databases such as Business Source Ultimate and British Education Index.

Introduction to Scopus

This guide covers beginner and advanced search functions in Scopus and explains how to manage and export results. It also covers some of Scopus’ more specialised features beyond article searching - such as searching both forward and backward from a particular citation and author profiles which cover affiliations, number of publications and bibliographic data, references, and details on the number of citations each published document has received. You’ll discover how to set up alerts to track changes to a profile.

Critical appraisal skills and statistics

Checklists, calculators and other appraisal tools are available on the Medicine, medical biosciences and healthcare resources page.

e-learning

Statistics and Experimental Design e-learning (Imperial resource)
This interactive short course for medicine and biomedicine has been produced by the Faculty of Medicine Postgraduate Education Team. Course content includes an introduction to statistics, descriptive statistics, 95% confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, correlation, simple and multiple linear regression, measures of risk and logistic regression, statistical power and sample size. You will also be able to open the SPSS program and explore a dataset.
Imperial staff and students may enrol via Blackboard using the link above. When you first click on the link you will see an error message in the main screeen but click 'enrol' in the left hand column and you should be able to access the course.
For enquiries about this course or any problems with access or content contact the course creators.

Critically Appraising the Evidence Base e-learning
This freely available programme was developed by the NHS Knowledge for Healthcare Learning Academy in partnership with recognised subject matter experts. It covers the different methods and tools to carry out critical appraisal of research, through 8 modules, each taking around 30 minutes to complete. By the end of the programme, learners will be able to: 

  • describe the following terms - critical appraisal, bias, internal validity and external validity 
  • distinguish between different types of study designs and their strengths and limitations 
  • assess the appropriateness of methods used to conduct a randomised controlled trial, systematic review, diagnostic study and qualitative study 
  • interpret commonly reported results found in clinical papers 
  • identify different types of critical appraisal tools and their strengths and limitations 

Sessions may be completed in any order, though to get the most out of the programme, we suggest completing the sessions in the order listed above. 

While the programme is freely available, you can log in with your NHS OpenAthens account to record progress. The programme is also available to NHS healthcare staff via the Electronic Staff Record (ESR). Accessing this e-learning via ESR means that your completions will transfer with you throughout your NHS career. 

Websites

Understanding Health Research (freely available)
This website will guide you through a series of simple questions to help you to easily review and interpret a published health research paper.

Referencing and reference management software

Find information about why and how to reference correctly on the Library Services referencing support pages. There are guides for both Vancouver and Harvard style as well as guidance on accessing and using reference management software such as EndNote, RefWorks, Mendeley and Zotero.

Plagiarism awareness and academic integrity

Faculty of Medicine students receive training in understanding and avoiding plagiarism in face-to-face and online teaching as part of their courses. Further guidance and support are available for students and staff who may want to refresh their knowledge.