Kuka
New member
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2017
- Messages
- 64
Greetings, Family.
This guide was born out of a very specific rabbit hole: tracking down a citation for HPS Lydia's reply about a Canadian circumcision study that had since gone offline. Something about that hunt — ten-plus browser windows, cross-referencing databases, chasing a source that kept slipping away — woke up something in me. I genuinely enjoyed it. Then I remembered: this is actually something I know how to do, from a very niche job I held four years ago.
Brother Black Magic's article on how casinos works gave me the idea to put this into writing, and Sister Astrid encouraged me to actually do it — so thank you both.
The reason I think this belongs here, on this forum, goes beyond general curiosity. If you are supporting a healing working for someone, or helping a loved one navigate a diagnosis, knowing how to read the actual research can make a real difference. It helps you walk into a GP appointment without getting stuck in a back-and-forth loop — you come prepared, you ask better questions, and the conversation moves forward.
Whether you are dealing with a new diagnosis, simply curious about health, or a student hunting for clinical data, Googling health information can be overwhelming and unreliable. This guide gives you a step-by-step roadmap to find trusted information — starting with plain English and ending with professional clinical data.
A bit about me: I spent a year working at a scientific library for an oncological research institute. I managed references across more than 30 medical units, tracked around 550+ peer-reviewed publications, and built personalized research strategy for both physicians and patients. It is a very niche background, but it turns out to be genuinely useful.
To show you how this works, I will use HER2 Breast Cancer as a running example across all four platforms — it was simply the first condition that came to mind. Every step works exactly the same way for any other condition you might need to research
1. MedlinePlus — The Trusted Starting Line Best for: General information, patients, and non-healthcare. avaiable in english and spanish
Before you look anywhere else, start here. Think of MedlinePlus as a government-referenced Wikipedia, but completely written and vetted by physicians. Run by the National Library of Medicine, it strips away confusing jargon and gives you the facts without trying to sell you a miracle cure.
Our Example: Search for Breast Cancer (keep it broad at this stage — you are building vocabulary, not diving deep yet). You will get a clean topic page that covers the basics: what it is, how it is diagnosed, how it is treated. Notice the left-hand sidebar menu — it breaks the topic into sections like Types, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Survival Rates. Work through those before moving on. By the end you will have the foundational vocabulary needed for every step that follows.
https://vsearch.nlm.nih.gov/vivisim...ources=medlineplus-bundle&query=Breast+Cancer
2. Cancer.gov — The Layered ResourceBest for: Bridging the gap between the general public and biomedical professionals.
While MedlinePlus will often link out to Cancer.gov, this site deserves its own standalone mention. Run by the National Cancer Institute, it is also available in Spanish — useful if you are searching for someone whose first language is not English.
Our Example: Go to the Breast Cancer section
https://www.cancer.gov/types/breast and look at the left-hand sidebar. What used to be a simple toggle between patient and professional content has since been reorganised into a full sidebar menu. You will see a dedicated Health Professional section — it sits alongside the patient-facing content rather than overlapping it. Click into it and you get the same topics (treatment, staging, screening) but written at a clinical level: cellular pathways, monoclonal antibody mechanisms, survival statistics. Same site, very different depth.
3. Google — Filtering Out the NoiseBest for: Finding local guidelines, nearby clinics, and searching in your native language.
MedlinePlus and PubMed are heavily English-centric. Once you understand your topic, you can use Google to search further in your own language — but you need basic "Boolean logic" so Google does not feed you commercial junk.
Our Example (HER2 Google String):"HER2-Low" OR "HER2-Positive" "Breast Cancer" targeted therapy site:.gov or any official site in your conuntry,
This forces Google to look only at official organizational guidelines and ignores SEO-optimized blogs.
4. PubMed — The Deep EndBest for: Biomedical students and finding raw peer-reviewed studies.
This is the ultimate database of academic literature. Unlike Google, PubMed uses specific tags and the capitalized word NOT to exclude terms. To do a highly targeted search, you use MeSH (Medical Subject Headings — PubMed's official dictionary) and Entry Terms (accepted synonyms).
The Pro Strategy: How to Build a Mega-String Fast
Our Example (HER2 PubMed String):
(("Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological"[Mesh] OR "Immunological Antineoplastic Agent*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Antineoplastics, Monoclonal Antibod*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Monoclonal Antibod*, Antineoplastic"[Title/Abstract] OR "Antineoplastic MAb*"[Title/Abstract]) AND ("Breast Neoplasms"[Mesh] OR "Breast Neoplasm*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Breast Tumor*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Breast Cancer*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Breast Malignant Neoplasm*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Mammary Carcinoma*, Human"[Title/Abstract]))
Paste that string directly into the main PubMed search bar. You instantly have a high-quality, ultra-specific literature search on immunological treatments for HER2 breast cancer — one that would normally take 10 minutes at least to build it.
A Note on Wisdom and Its Limits
Knowledge is a gift and a responsibility — use it to become a more informed, empowered person. But even the deepest research is not a substitute for direct guidance from someone who can truly see your situation. Whatever you find in these databases, bring it to a qualified physician or oncologist and let it become the beginning of a conversation, not the end of one.
I hope this will help someone
This guide was born out of a very specific rabbit hole: tracking down a citation for HPS Lydia's reply about a Canadian circumcision study that had since gone offline. Something about that hunt — ten-plus browser windows, cross-referencing databases, chasing a source that kept slipping away — woke up something in me. I genuinely enjoyed it. Then I remembered: this is actually something I know how to do, from a very niche job I held four years ago.
Brother Black Magic's article on how casinos works gave me the idea to put this into writing, and Sister Astrid encouraged me to actually do it — so thank you both.
The reason I think this belongs here, on this forum, goes beyond general curiosity. If you are supporting a healing working for someone, or helping a loved one navigate a diagnosis, knowing how to read the actual research can make a real difference. It helps you walk into a GP appointment without getting stuck in a back-and-forth loop — you come prepared, you ask better questions, and the conversation moves forward.
Whether you are dealing with a new diagnosis, simply curious about health, or a student hunting for clinical data, Googling health information can be overwhelming and unreliable. This guide gives you a step-by-step roadmap to find trusted information — starting with plain English and ending with professional clinical data.
A bit about me: I spent a year working at a scientific library for an oncological research institute. I managed references across more than 30 medical units, tracked around 550+ peer-reviewed publications, and built personalized research strategy for both physicians and patients. It is a very niche background, but it turns out to be genuinely useful.
To show you how this works, I will use HER2 Breast Cancer as a running example across all four platforms — it was simply the first condition that came to mind. Every step works exactly the same way for any other condition you might need to research
1. MedlinePlus — The Trusted Starting Line Best for: General information, patients, and non-healthcare. avaiable in english and spanish
Before you look anywhere else, start here. Think of MedlinePlus as a government-referenced Wikipedia, but completely written and vetted by physicians. Run by the National Library of Medicine, it strips away confusing jargon and gives you the facts without trying to sell you a miracle cure.
Our Example: Search for Breast Cancer (keep it broad at this stage — you are building vocabulary, not diving deep yet). You will get a clean topic page that covers the basics: what it is, how it is diagnosed, how it is treated. Notice the left-hand sidebar menu — it breaks the topic into sections like Types, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Survival Rates. Work through those before moving on. By the end you will have the foundational vocabulary needed for every step that follows.
https://vsearch.nlm.nih.gov/vivisim...ources=medlineplus-bundle&query=Breast+Cancer2. Cancer.gov — The Layered ResourceBest for: Bridging the gap between the general public and biomedical professionals.
While MedlinePlus will often link out to Cancer.gov, this site deserves its own standalone mention. Run by the National Cancer Institute, it is also available in Spanish — useful if you are searching for someone whose first language is not English.
Our Example: Go to the Breast Cancer section
https://www.cancer.gov/types/breast and look at the left-hand sidebar. What used to be a simple toggle between patient and professional content has since been reorganised into a full sidebar menu. You will see a dedicated Health Professional section — it sits alongside the patient-facing content rather than overlapping it. Click into it and you get the same topics (treatment, staging, screening) but written at a clinical level: cellular pathways, monoclonal antibody mechanisms, survival statistics. Same site, very different depth.3. Google — Filtering Out the NoiseBest for: Finding local guidelines, nearby clinics, and searching in your native language.
MedlinePlus and PubMed are heavily English-centric. Once you understand your topic, you can use Google to search further in your own language — but you need basic "Boolean logic" so Google does not feed you commercial junk.
- AND / OR logic: Google automatically puts an AND between words (narrowing the search). If you want synonyms, use a capitalized OR — e.g., "HER2-Low" OR "HER2-Positive".
- The minus sign ( - ): Google's version of NOT. Use it to ban words from results.
- The site filter: Add site:.gov (or your country's equivalent — site:.it for Italy, site:.edu for universities).
Our Example (HER2 Google String):"HER2-Low" OR "HER2-Positive" "Breast Cancer" targeted therapy site:.gov or any official site in your conuntry,
This forces Google to look only at official organizational guidelines and ignores SEO-optimized blogs.
4. PubMed — The Deep EndBest for: Biomedical students and finding raw peer-reviewed studies.
This is the ultimate database of academic literature. Unlike Google, PubMed uses specific tags and the capitalized word NOT to exclude terms. To do a highly targeted search, you use MeSH (Medical Subject Headings — PubMed's official dictionary) and Entry Terms (accepted synonyms).
The Pro Strategy: How to Build a Mega-String Fast
- Find an anchor article — one article you really like on PubMed (e.g., HER2-Low Breast Cancer: Now and in the Future). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38291745/
- Scroll to the bottom — look below the citations for the "MeSH terms" section.
- Open the MeSH Database — click a relevant term (e.g., Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological) to see all associated synonyms (Entry Terms). https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/2023292 and
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/68001943 (those are the mesh terms)
those are the entry terms, which research on the topics uses it's also associated by editors onto the Mesh terms on Thesaurus, also they let you see novel research un-indexed by using those terms commonly referred as keywords
- Use AI to build your string — ask an AI to build a search block using the [Mesh] tag for the main term and [tiab] (Title/Abstract) for the entry terms. Use * to catch plurals — Antibod* catches both Antibody and Antibodies. this is the trick instead of copying and getting mad on advanced search, Ai can do the heavy lift here.
- Combine with AND — wrap your blocks in parentheses and connect concepts with AND. between the Mesh terms, as below you'll see i searched for Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological as mesh, the OR terms are the entry terms combined with
Our Example (HER2 PubMed String):
(("Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological"[Mesh] OR "Immunological Antineoplastic Agent*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Antineoplastics, Monoclonal Antibod*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Monoclonal Antibod*, Antineoplastic"[Title/Abstract] OR "Antineoplastic MAb*"[Title/Abstract]) AND ("Breast Neoplasms"[Mesh] OR "Breast Neoplasm*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Breast Tumor*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Breast Cancer*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Breast Malignant Neoplasm*"[Title/Abstract] OR "Mammary Carcinoma*, Human"[Title/Abstract]))
Paste that string directly into the main PubMed search bar. You instantly have a high-quality, ultra-specific literature search on immunological treatments for HER2 breast cancer — one that would normally take 10 minutes at least to build it.
A Note on Wisdom and Its Limits
Knowledge is a gift and a responsibility — use it to become a more informed, empowered person. But even the deepest research is not a substitute for direct guidance from someone who can truly see your situation. Whatever you find in these databases, bring it to a qualified physician or oncologist and let it become the beginning of a conversation, not the end of one.
I hope this will help someone
