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SUDC 4300: Intro to Substance Use Disorder Counseling

Search Strategies

Whether you're using OneSearch or another library database, learning a few key search strategies will make your search process more effective. When using search engines like Google, you can type in whole questions or long phrases. But library databases are designed differently and require adjusting our search process. Use the following strategies to find the information most relevant to your research!

Search Terms

First, brainstorm the main search terms related to your topic. Library databases works best when you use nouns as search terms—eliminate any articles (of, to, is, the), adjectives (best, worst, good, bad), and most verbs (affect, change, alter, support).

Quotation Marks

Quotation marks are used to tell databases to search for exact phrases. This is especially useful for topics that can't be boiled down to a single word.

  • "post-traumatic stress disorder"
  • "art therapy"

This is also helpful when searching for the title of a specific source.

  • "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders"
  • "Journal of Psychoactive Drugs"

AND

You'll then connect your search terms using AND to create a search string you can use in a database search box.

When you connect search terms using AND, the database finds items that contain all your search terms. Search strings using AND narrow our search and make it more specific to our topic. 

  • "dialectical behavioral therapy" AND women
  • "substance abuse" AND treatment 
  • "psychodynamic therapy" AND emotions 

OR and Parenthesis

OR tells the database to find items that contain at least one of two or three words. This helps us search for synonyms or closely related terms, without having to search for each term separately—saving you time!

Often, OR is used in conjunction with parenthesis. OR on its own often finds too many results, so the parentheses help keep the database from bringing up off-topic resources.

  • (teenagers or adolescents) AND ("drug addiction" OR "drug abuse")
  • "seeking safety" AND ("group therapy" OR "group counseling" OR "group intervention")
  • (methadone OR suboxone) AND "side effects"

Truncation

Using truncation is a great way to find synonyms or different variations of a word, so you don't have to type in every version of a word you want the database to look for. Start with the beginning part of a term, then add an asterisk:

  • therap*

The * lets the database know you want all words that start with those letters. So, this search would bring up: therapy, therapist, therapeutic, and therapeutical. Be careful with this one! If you shorten a word too early (thera*), you'll get unexpected results (like Theranos—the name of a shady corporation!).

NOT

You may want to exclude certain concepts from your research. This can be done using the word NOT. Search strings using NOT help you narrow your search and find results that are more relevant to your topic.

  • addiction AND treatment NOT gambling
  • students AND stress NOT fracture

Get Help

If you're struggling with your searches, contact a librarian! We can help you brainstorm relevant keywords and help you format search strings for effective use in library databases.

Library Help

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