A systematic database search strategy is essential for conducting a comprehensive literature review. We help you develop reproducible search strings that retrieve all relevant studies while maintaining precision—saving you time and ensuring you don't miss critical papers.
We conduct systematic searches across major academic databases to ensure comprehensive literature coverage for your research.
Biomedical and life sciences literature with MeSH term indexing for precise searches.
Multi-disciplinary database covering peer-reviewed literature across all academic fields.
High-impact journals with citation tracking and core collection access.
Nursing and allied health literature with specialized subject headings.
Psychology and behavioural sciences with comprehensive thesaurus.
Humanities and social sciences archival journal collection.
Engineering, electronics, and computer science technical literature.
Broad academic search including grey literature and preprints.
Translate your research problem into a clear, answerable question using PICO or similar frameworks.
Extract core concepts and variables from your research question to form search blocks.
Brainstorm synonyms, related terms, and database-specific controlled vocabulary for each concept.
Combine terms using AND, OR, and NOT operators to create precise, reproducible search strings.
Add date ranges, language, publication type, and other filters to focus results.
We develop systematic, reproducible search strategies tailored to your research question and discipline. Our approach follows PRISMA guidelines for systematic reviews.
Narrows search by requiring all terms to appear. Use to connect different concepts. Example: "diabetes AND exercise AND glucose" retrieves articles containing all three terms.
Expands search by including any of the terms. Use for synonyms. Example: "adolescent OR teenager OR youth" retrieves articles with any of these terms.
Excludes unwanted concepts. Use cautiously to avoid removing relevant results. Example: "learning NOT animal" excludes animal studies from learning research.