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Grey Literature for Health Sciences and Medicine

This guide provides some useful sources of grey literature in Health Sciences and Medicine including tips on how to find it.

Grey Literature Tutorial

Grey Literature Tutorial

Enrol in the self paced tutorial designed to teach the principles for searching for grey literature sources in research projects.

Each module includes instruction and an interactive exercise to explore an issue where grey literature plays a relevant role.

The exercises make use of a variety of free and University of Melbourne subscription resources to explore the topic. 

 

Enrol now - University of Melbourne Staff and Students only
 


Module Descriptions
 

  1. What is Grey Literature?  
    Understand what is meant by the term grey literature and the types of sources that it represents.  Identify grey literature citations from a reference list and explore the issues that searching for known sources may present.
     
  2. Search Strategies for Grey Literature 
    Developing a search strategy to identify grey literature sources requires an understanding of the special properties that make grey literature "grey".  Search development is informed by the results you collect and may require several attempts to complete the task.
     
  3. Government Reports 
    Identify approaches that can be used to look for Australian and international reports.  The focus in this module is on Victorian and Australian reports but the techniques used apply equally for other jurisdictions.
     
  4. Clinical Trials 
    Publications that result from clinical trials can be found in the journal literature with databases like Medline and Embase.  Searching for active or non-reported trials requires investigation of registry sites.  Cortellis combines information from multiple registries for the use of researchers and the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries.
     
  5. Statistics 
    Searching for statistics that suit your research need can be tricky.  This module looks at strategies that can be employed to find statistics on diseases, interventions, populations and services.
     
  6. Theses 
    Theses can be identified in some of the standard subject based databases or may require specialist databases and searches of individual institutional repositories or national databases like Trove.