PHL Discovery

Help & Tips

Alerts Author alerts  |  Citation alerts  |  Conference alerts  |  Journal Alerts  |  Topic alerts  

Books (print) Borrowing  |  Finding  |  Interlibrary loans  |  Purchase suggestions  |  Departmental texts  |  Course Texts  


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Alerts

👉 Peninsula Health doesn't provide access to Scopus or Web of Science, but if you do via a University affiliation, they both provide good alerting options

Author alerts

Set up alerts for when an author of interest - perhaps yourself - is cited or has a new publication

Author is cited or has new publication via Google Scholar

1. Go to Google Scholar

2. 👉 Note - not every author will have a Google Scholar profile

3. Search for the author of interest. In this example, will use AB Smith

4. At the top of the page, will be User profiles for ab smith

5. The AB Smith you are interested in may be listed (in this example there are multiple AB Smith's so you can find the correct one by looking at their institution and field of research)

6. Click on the AB Smith of interest using the link directly under the User profiles text

7. On the subsequent page, click on the blue Follow button, check the New citations to this author box, and enter your email for alerts

8. You will notice there is also an option to be alerted to new articles by the author. This is an alternative to the Discovery approach discussed further below

9. Haven't found your author this way? An alternative approach 🔽

10. Search Google Scholar for an article by the author (by article title or DOI number - this is the one that starts with 10.)

11. If - when you find the article - the author's name is underlined, you can click it and follow steps 7-8 above

Author has new publication via Discovery

1. Ensure you are logged into Discovery

2. Go to Discovery Advanced Search

3. In the Query Builder, change Keyword to Author (and leave at Begins With). For example: berk

4. In the Query Builder, change the second Keyword field to Affiliation (and leave at Like). For example: deakin

5. Untick the bottom boxes Show full text available only and possibly Show peer reviewed only

6. Do the search and on the resulting page, change Sort by Relevance to Sort by Date (left hand side of page)

7. Click on the My Searches button under the search string

8. On the subsequent page select the Alerts frequency (Daily, Weekly, Monthly)

10. Note As this search is using the author's current affiliation, it will cease to work if they move to another organisation

Citation alerts

Set up alert for when an article of interest is newly cited

1. Go to Google Scholar

2. Find article of interest by searching for it by title or DOI number (this is the one that starts with 10.)

3. Click on the Cited By link under the article

4. Click on Create alert (bottom left)

5. You can change the email involved at this stage if you like

6. 👉 As per Step 3, this will only work if the article has already been cited at least once

7. For articles that haven't yet been cited, there is a technical workaround available

Conference alerts

Find conferences for your specialty

Health & Medicine Conferences in Australia

Medical & Pharma Conferences in Australia

All Conference Alert Click on specialty (e.g. cardiology) to filter. Use Subscribe (bottom right in footer) to receive alerts

Journal alerts

Journal alerts are very easily created and removed using Discovery.

Topic alerts

Be emailed new articles that match your search using Discovery or an Ovid database (Medline, Embase, Emcare, PsychINFO) 🔽

Ovid database topic alerts

1. Open an Ovid database from either the Discovery Databases page or from the SharePoint Databases page

2. In the database, click on My Account (top middle) and either log in or create an account and be logged in

3. Create your search and once satisfied, click on Save All (on the left under the search lines)

4. On the resulting screen you can give your search a name, add any comments, set the frequency (weekly, monthly etc) and more

5. You will now receive a regular email with any new articles that match your search strategy. You will receive an email even if there are no matches

6. To edit / delete Ovid alerts, click on View Saved (top right-ish) whilst logged in and on the resulting page click on Autoalert (SDI) Searches tab

7. Select the alert and then either Delete (icon top middle) or edit (pencil icon to right of alert) An alert can be deleted by selecting the alert and clickOnce satisfied, click on Save All (on the left under the search lines)

8. 🔔 An Ovid account is also useful to save a search when you need to do something else and come back to it later. At Step 4 above, just change the Type dropdown to either Permanent or Temporary

 


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Books (Print)

Borrowing

Borrowing print books

1. Complete the short online Book borrower form

2. Search for print books

3. For the book you want, click on Place Hold (log in if you aren't already, using your credentials from Step 1)

4. The Library will put the book aside for you to be collected from the Library office in the Ngarnga Centre

5. Alternatively, if you would like the book sent to you via internal mail - at Step 3 click on the Show more options link & provide your delivery details in the Hold notes field

6. If the book in question is currently on loan, then you will be notified when it has been returned

7. If the book you want isn't part of the collection you can:

  • See if it's available as an online book
  • Request it on interlibrary loan. This isn't available for course texts
  • Suggest it as a library purchase. This isn't available for course texts

Finding

Print books can be searched for using the Books (Print) tab in Discovery

Interlibrary loans

For books that aren't available in print or online & aren't a course text, they can be requested on interlibrary loan

Purchase suggestions

Print book purchase suggestions

1. Suggestions for a book purchase can be made by emailing the Library

2. It should be noted that the Library is in general moving away from print to online books

3. Books won't be purchased for course texts. See Course Texts section

4. Print books are sometimes purchased for departments. See Departmental Texts section

Departmental texts

Details on departmental texts

1. In many cases, it makes more sense for a print book to be located where it is most likely to be used rather than on the Library shelf

2. If a department is interested in a particular book, they should first see if it is already available online as this may be sufficient

3. If not currently available online, then the department should contact the Library to see if this can be purchased as online books have advantages (available to all staff & both from work and home)

3. If online isn't available and / or the department prefers a print version, then that is possible

4. In terms of funding, the requesting department should generally pay for the book. On occasion, the Library has sufficient funds for this purpose

5. Previously, many books were on extended loan to departments. This is gradually being replaced by permanent location in the department as this avoids certain problems (repeated overdue notices, issues when the departmental borrower leaves the organisation etc)

6. Departmental texts are generally still searchable - the record will say "Not for loan" but will list the department involved just in case anyone else might like to look at it

Course texts

Books for study

1. The Library doesn't have the space or budget to purchase books for study

2. Interlibrary loan is not a good option either as the lending library is often reluctant to lend at all or if it does it will only be for short periods as it wants to retain access for its own staff

3. The site Booko is useful as it will search many book sites at once to enable the cheapest purchase

4. Another useful one is Second Hand University Textbooks for Buy, Sell & Swap Australia Only

5. By using these sites, course texts can be bought, used fully during the study period, and then sold second hand aftwards. Potentially a tax deduction could be claimed also

 


🔎 Discovery Search Help

Articles / Journals / Ebooks / Ebook Chapters / Print Books / Google Scholar / PubMed / UpToDate

 

TIPS FOR ARTICLES IN DISCOVERY   

Back to Articles search

 

GETTING FULL TEXT

Full text articles Indicated by:  View Full Text green button
   
Request article No full text? Click on the purple Request This button (a very simple form that just requires your name and email. If you are logged into Discovery, these are automatically filled out

 

SEARCH TIPS

Phrase: Use quotes (e.g. "heart disease")
   
Title: Use title: to search for words in the article title (e.g. title:diabetes)
   
Author: Use author: (e.g. author:smith)
   
Truncation:  To find word extensions, use the truncation symbol *
(e.g. diabet* finds diabetes and diabetic)
   
Boolean:  To find word combinations use Boolean operators
(e.g. cat AND dog finds both words;  cat OR dog finds either term)
   
Search example: Example - you need review articles about exercise and depression
You could search for title:(exercise AND depress* AND review)
   
Refine Search:  After searching, many filter options appear on the left (e.g. date, subject etc).
To use these, hover your mouse and tick the box that appears to select, and then click on the green Apply button further down
 

 

DOI / PMID:

If you have them, you can find articles using their unique identifiers:
DOI: This number always starts with 10. (e.g. 10.1002/jpen.2495)
PMID: PubMed number e.g PMID: 8188588  (search for 8188588)

 

OTHER 

Google Scholar If you have found a particularly relevant article, it can be useful to see which other articles have cited it. Paste the article title or DOI or PMID (as above) into the Google Scholar tab
   
Databases If you need additional search functionality then it is better to use individual databases

 

TIPS FOR JOURNALS IN DISCOVERY   

Back to Journals search

 

ADDITIONAL SEARCH OPTIONS 

Specialty search: Click here, use Browse by subject, and type a discipline area (e.g. cardiology)


JOURNAL TABLE OF CONTENTS (TOC) ALERTS 

Visual Learner? Visual instructions on creating journal alerts
   
Create account: Create an Ovid Discovery account, and remain logged in
   
Search: Search for journal of interest (via search, browse by letter, or by subject as above).
available). Click on Activate Journal Alert link. Not every journal will have this available.
   
Full text access: If the journal shows access to current (e.g 01/2010 - Current) then full text will be available immediately, via the emailed TOC alert. If the access shown is not to current (e.g. 2010 - 2020) or there is an embargo period, then full text won't be available. However just use the Request This link and the Library will obtain the full text for you.

 

TIPS FOR EBOOKS IN DISCOVERY   

Back to Ebooks search

Access: Onsite, access is immediate. Offsite, you will be prompted to login with your Athens account.

Number: There are more than 8000 ebooks available

Core Titles: Some core titles available include:

 

TIPS FOR EBOOK CHAPTERS IN DISCOVERY   

Back to Ebook Chapters search

 

ADDITIONAL SEARCH OPTIONS ...

TIPS FOR PRINT BOOKS IN DISCOVERY   

Back to Print Books search

Register: To borrow print books, complete this quick online Registration (this will also allow you to place holds & suggest purchases as below)

Holds: You can put a hold on books on loan (you need to be logged in to do this - see Register above)

Purchase suggestions: You can suggest print books for the library collection or your area, or ebooks for everyone to access. To do this you need to be logged in (see Register above) and then visit the Purchase Suggestion page

Physical collection: This is located at the Ngarnga Centre. Note that only some of the print books are accessible on the entrance floor. The rest are located in the basement - to gain access to this area, please ask a librarian (office is first left when entering the building)

 

TIPS FOR GOOGLE SCHOLAR IN DISCOVERY   

Back to Google Scholar search

For a given article of interest, click on Cited By if available. This can be a good way to find related and more recent articles. The Related Articles link is also sometimes useful.

Too many citing articles? You can click on the Search within Citing Articles box and enter relevant terms to narrow down result. You can also limit by publication date on the left.

Like to be alerted when there are new citations for an article of interest (perhaps your own)? Use the Create Alert option on the left.

​​​​If using offsite, you will need to log in to your Athens account to access the full text content

 

TIPS FOR PUBMED IN DISCOVERY   

Back to PubMed search

Clicking the Peninsula Health logo will either give you full text of the article or allow you to request it easily (just 3 fields)

If doing offsite, you may need to login with your Athens account to access full text articles

Linkage to Peninsula Health full text is via a custom PubMed URL. If you want to take advantage of this anywhere else use:

   https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?otool=iaupeninhealib

Use PubMed Clinical Queries if you would like easy limits for therapy, prognosis etc

 

TIPS FOR UPTODATE IN DISCOVERY   

Back to UpToDate search

Access:

Onsite, access is immediate

Offsite, follow the steps below to access on your phone, laptop etc​​​​​​​

  1. Go to UpToDate (this needs to be done on a Peninsula Health computer)
  2. Complete the Registration form (orange Register button at top right)
  3. To access offsite, go to  www.uptodate.com and log in using button at top right
  4. To access on your phone, download the UpToDate app (Android / iOS) and log in
  5. Every 3 months, an email will prompt you to log into UpToDate (on a Peninsula Health computer) to maintain access

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