4.6 Review

Using Embase as a supplement to PubMed in Cochrane reviews differed across fields

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 133, Issue -, Pages 24-31

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.12.022

Keywords

Database coverage; Information retrieval; Embase; PubMed; Systematic reviews; Bibliographic databases

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This study analyzed the coverage of Embase as a supplement to PubMed and found that using Embase can compensate for low coverage in PubMed searches. Supplementing PubMed with Embase significantly increased the coverage of included publications and studies, but there were substantial differences in coverage across different groups.
Objective: Medline/PubMed is often first choice for health science researchers when doing literature searches. However, Medline/PubMed does not cover the health science research literature equally well across specialties. Embase is often considered an important supplement to Medline/PubMed in health sciences. The present study analyzes the coverage of Embase as a supplement to PubMed, and the aim of the study is to investigate if searching Embase can compensate for low PubMed retrieval. Study Design and Setting: The population in this study is all the included studies in all Cochrane reviews from 2012 to 2016 across the 53 Cochrane groups. The analyses were performed using two units of analysis (study and publication). We are examining the coverage in Embase of publications and studies not covered by PubMed (25,119 publications and 9,420 studies). Results: The results showed that using Embase as a supplement to PubMed resulted in a coverage of 66,994 publications out of 86,167 and a coverage rate of 77.7, 95% CI [75.05, 80.45] of all the included publications. Embase combined with PubMed covered 48,326 out of 54,901 studies and thus had a coverage rate of 88.0%, 95% CI [86.2, 89.9] of studies. The results also showed that supplementing PubMed with Embase increased coverage of included publications by 6.8 percentage points, and the coverage of studies increased by 5.5 percentage points. Substantial differences were found across and within review groups over time. Conclusion: The included publications and studies in some groups are covered considerably better by supplementing with Embase, whereas in other groups, the difference in coverage is negligible. However, due to the variation over time, one should be careful predicting the benefit from supplementing PubMed with Embase to retrieve relevant publications to include in a review. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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