12 KiB
| name | description |
|---|---|
| research-medical | Use when researching medical/scientific topics and encountering paywalled journals, access failures, or needing primary sources - provides strategies for PubMed Central, DOI resolution, preprint servers, and fallback approaches for medical literature access |
Medical Research Access
Strategies for accessing medical and scientific literature when direct web access fails or sources are paywalled.
When to Use This Skill
Use when:
- Webfetch fails on medical journal sites (NIH, Nature, JAMA, NEJM, etc.)
- Research requires primary sources (studies, trials, systematic reviews)
- Need to access paywalled medical literature
- Looking for recent research not yet peer-reviewed
- Extracting citations when full text unavailable
When NOT to use:
- General web research (use standard webfetch)
- Medical journalism is sufficient (STAT News, MedPage Today)
- Topic well-covered in open-access sources
Quick Reference: Access Strategies
| Source Type | Primary Method | Fallback | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peer-reviewed studies | PubMed Central | DOI resolution, preprints | Always check PMC first |
| Recent research | Preprint servers | Author websites | May not be peer-reviewed yet |
| Clinical trials | ClinicalTrials.gov | Trial registries | Protocol vs results |
| Meta-analyses | Cochrane Library | PubMed search | Often open access |
| Medical journalism | STAT News, Medscape | Press releases | Secondary sources |
| Guidelines | Professional societies | NIH, CDC | Usually open access |
Access Strategies
1. PubMed Central (PMC) - First Stop
Why PMC: Free full-text archive of biomedical literature, subset of PubMed with actual paper content.
Search approaches:
# Direct PMC search
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/?term=ivermectin+COVID-19+randomized+controlled+trial
# Filters to add:
- Free full text
- Article type (Clinical Trial, Meta-Analysis, Systematic Review)
- Publication date range
When webfetch fails on PMC:
- Try PubMed instead (has abstracts even without full text)
- Search by PMID if you have it:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/[PMID]/ - Look for "Free PMC article" badge in PubMed results
2. DOI Resolution Services
What is DOI: Digital Object Identifier - permanent link to research papers.
Primary resolver:
https://doi.org/[DOI-HERE]
Example: https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2115869
When DOI resolution hits paywall:
- Try adding DOI to Google Scholar:
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=[DOI] - Check for "All versions" link in Scholar (may include preprint or author PDF)
- Look for institutional repository versions
Extracting DOI from citations:
- Usually in format:
10.XXXX/journal.year.number - Found at end of citation or in URL
- Can search PubMed by DOI to get PMID
3. Preprint Servers - Recent Research
Primary servers:
| Server | Focus | URL Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| medRxiv | Medicine | https://www.medrxiv.org/content/[ID] |
| bioRxiv | Biology | https://www.biorxiv.org/content/[ID] |
| SSRN | Social science, econ | https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=[ID] |
Important notes:
- Preprints are NOT peer-reviewed
- Always note preprint status in citations
- Check if preprint later published in journal (search by title)
- Good for very recent research (last 6-12 months)
Search strategy:
# Search medRxiv directly
https://www.medrxiv.org/search/ivermectin%20COVID-19
# Or use Google Scholar with "preprint" filter
site:medrxiv.org OR site:biorxiv.org [search terms]
4. Medical Journalism Without Paywalls
Freely accessible sources:
- STAT News (
statnews.com) - High-quality medical journalism, no paywall - Medscape (
medscape.com) - Free with registration, clinical news - The Conversation (
theconversation.com) - Academic experts, open access - Science Daily (
sciencedaily.com) - Press releases and summaries - NIH News (
nih.gov/news-events) - Government research announcements
When to use journalism vs primary sources:
- Journalism: Background, context, expert opinions, controversy overview
- Primary sources: Specific claims, data, methodology, for fact-checking
Citation approach:
- Use journalism to identify key studies
- Track down primary sources for verification
- Cite primary source when making factual claims
- Cite journalism when discussing expert opinions or controversy
5. Clinical Trial Registries
ClinicalTrials.gov - Official US registry:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/search?term=[drug/intervention]
Filter by:
- Study Status (Completed, Published)
- Study Type (Interventional)
- Study Results (Studies with Results)
What you get:
- Trial protocol and design
- Primary/secondary outcomes
- Results summary (if published)
- Links to published papers
Other registries:
- WHO ICTRP (international):
https://trialsearch.who.int/ - EU Clinical Trials Register:
https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu/
6. Professional Society Guidelines
Often open access:
- CDC guidelines:
cdc.gov - WHO guidelines:
who.int - NIH treatment guidelines:
covid19treatmentguidelines.nih.gov - Professional societies (AMA, ACP, IDSA) - check guidelines sections
Good for:
- Official recommendations
- Evidence summaries
- Standard of care
- Consensus positions
7. Google Scholar Strategies
When direct access fails:
# Search with specific terms
"ivermectin" "COVID-19" "randomized controlled trial"
# Use "All versions" link to find:
- Preprint versions
- Author PDFs
- Institutional repository copies
# Filter by date range for recent research
Citation extraction when full text unavailable:
- Scholar provides formatted citations
- Shows "Cited by" count (impact indicator)
- Links to related articles
- May show abstract even without full text
8. Author Websites and ResearchGate
When other methods fail:
- Search author name + paper title
- Check university faculty pages (often have PDFs)
- ResearchGate (
researchgate.net) - researchers share papers - Academia.edu - similar to ResearchGate
Caution:
- Verify version matches published paper
- Note if it's a preprint or draft
- Check publication date
Webfetch vs Direct Access Decision Tree
Use webfetch when:
- Source is known to be open access
- Medical journalism sites (STAT, Medscape)
- Government sites (NIH, CDC, FDA)
- Preprint servers
- Professional society guidelines
Skip webfetch, use search strategies when:
- Major journal sites (Nature, JAMA, NEJM, Lancet) - usually paywalled
- You have DOI - use DOI resolver or Scholar
- Need recent research - go to preprint servers
- Previous webfetch attempts failed on similar sources
General agent with web search when:
- Exploratory research (don't know specific sources yet)
- Need to identify key studies first
- Looking for expert commentary or summaries
- Building initial source list
Citation Extraction Techniques
When Full Text Unavailable
From abstracts (PubMed):
- Study design and methods
- Primary outcomes
- Sample size
- Key findings (usually in abstract)
- Limitations (sometimes mentioned)
From press releases:
- High-level findings
- Author quotes
- Institution and funding
- Link to actual paper (follow this)
From systematic reviews/meta-analyses:
- Summary of multiple studies
- Effect sizes across studies
- Quality assessments
- Usually cite all included studies (mine these)
Citation Format Best Practices
Minimum required:
Author(s). Title. Journal Year;Volume(Issue):Pages. DOI: [DOI]
Enhanced format:
Author(s). Title. Journal Year;Volume(Issue):Pages. DOI: [DOI]. PMID: [PMID]. [Access status]
Example:
Lopez-Medina E, et al. Effect of Ivermectin on Time to Resolution of Symptoms Among Adults With Mild COVID-19. JAMA 2021;325(14):1426-1435. DOI: 10.1001/jama.2021.3071. PMID: 33662102. [Free full text via PMC]
Always include:
- DOI (for verification and access)
- PMID if available (PubMed tracking)
- Access status (open access, PMC free, paywalled)
- Preprint status if applicable
Common Mistakes
❌ Giving up after first webfetch failure
Problem: Many medical sites block automated access or require authentication.
Fix: Use systematic fallback strategy:
- Try PubMed Central search
- Use DOI resolver if you have DOI
- Check preprint servers
- Search Google Scholar for alternative versions
- Use medical journalism to identify sources, then track down primary
❌ Citing journalism when primary source is accessible
Problem: Secondary source citation when primary is available weakens credibility.
Fix:
- Use journalism to find studies
- Always attempt to access primary source
- Cite primary source for factual claims
- Cite journalism only for expert opinions or controversy framing
❌ Not noting preprint vs peer-reviewed status
Problem: Preprints lack peer review and may contain errors or later be contradicted.
Fix:
- Always check publication status
- Note in citation: "[Preprint, not peer-reviewed]"
- Search by title to see if later published in journal
- Weight peer-reviewed sources more heavily
❌ Ignoring "Cited by" counts and publication dates
Problem: May miss that study was retracted, contradicted, or superseded.
Fix:
- Check "Cited by" in Google Scholar
- Look for retractions or corrections
- Check for more recent systematic reviews
- Note if study is outlier vs consensus
❌ Using only abstracts for detailed claims
Problem: Abstracts omit important limitations, methods details, and context.
Fix:
- Use abstract for high-level findings only
- For specific claims, need full text
- If full text unavailable, note limitation: "[Based on abstract only]"
- Look for systematic reviews that analyzed full text
❌ Not tracking access failures for optimization
Problem: Repeated failures on same source types waste time.
Fix:
- Note which sources consistently fail webfetch
- Build project-specific access strategy
- Document successful access patterns
- Update AGENTS.md with project-specific guidance
Real-World Impact
Session context: Pierre Kory/ivermectin research encountered 4 failed web access attempts (NIH, FDA, Nature, JAMA, MedPage Today), limiting source diversity to 2 primary sources.
With this skill:
- PubMed Central search would provide free full-text access to key trials
- DOI resolution would access Nature and JAMA papers via alternative routes
- Preprint servers would surface early ivermectin research
- Medical journalism (STAT News) would provide controversy context without paywall
- Clinical trial registries would provide TOGETHER trial and other RCT data
Expected improvement: 5-8 accessible sources instead of 2, with mix of primary sources and expert commentary.
Workflow Integration
Research Session Startup
- Identify topic and key terms
- Start with PubMed Central search (free full text)
- Check for systematic reviews (summarize evidence)
- Search preprint servers (recent research)
- Use medical journalism (context and expert opinions)
- Track citations (DOI, PMID, access status)
When Webfetch Fails
- Don't retry same URL - move to fallback strategy
- Extract DOI from citation - use DOI resolver
- Search PubMed by title - may find PMC version
- Check Google Scholar - look for "All versions"
- Note failure - document for future optimization
Citation Verification
- Have DOI or PMID - verify via PubMed lookup
- Check publication status - preprint vs peer-reviewed
- Look for retractions - search "[title] retraction"
- Note access method - for reproducibility
- Capture full citation - author, title, journal, DOI, PMID
Additional Resources
PubMed search tips:
- Use MeSH terms (Medical Subject Headings) for precise searches
- Combine with Boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT)
- Use filters: Free full text, Article type, Publication date
- Save searches for repeated use
Understanding study types:
- RCT (Randomized Controlled Trial) - gold standard
- Systematic Review/Meta-Analysis - synthesis of multiple studies
- Cohort Study - observational, follows groups over time
- Case-Control Study - compares cases to controls
- Case Series/Report - descriptive, lowest evidence level
Red flags in research:
- Preprint only (not peer-reviewed)
- Retracted or corrected
- Conflicts of interest not disclosed
- Small sample size with strong claims
- Outlier findings not replicated