Thursday, March 12, 2026

Subject Headings explained: Unlock the secret language of the databases

 

We have all been there. You type a perfectly reasonable search into one of the medical databases, hit enter, and find yourself overwhelmed by thousands of irrelevant database results — or frustrated that a search returns almost nothing. Something is going wrong — but what?

The answer is that you're speaking a different language from the database. Medical databases aren't like Google. They aren't built to interpret natural language and guess what you mean. They're built around a precise, controlled vocabulary — and unless you know how to use it, you can leave the best evidence buried.

This post will walk you through subject headings: what they are, why they exist, how to find the right ones, and how to use them to make your searches more comprehensive.


What Are Subject Headings?

Every article indexed in a medical database is read by a trained indexer — a human expert who assigns standardised labels to describe what that article is about. These labels are called subject headings, and they come from a fixed, carefully maintained list of approved terms.

Different databases use different systems:












Think of it like a library catalogue. If every librarian labelled books differently — one calling it "heart attack," another "myocardial infarction," another "MI" — finding everything on the topic would be more difficult. Subject headings solve this by insisting that every article about a heart attack gets the same tag, no matter what term the authors use.

All those terms — heart attack, MI, coronary thrombosis, cardiac infarction — feed into a single subject heading. Search the heading, and you capture them all.

Subject Headings vs. Keywords: What's the Difference?

A keyword search asks: "does this word appear somewhere in the article?"
A subject heading search asks: "was this article tagged as being about this concept?" These are very different questions.

Keywords (sometimes called free-text or text words) search for the word you type — in the title, abstract, or sometimes the full text. They are flexible and can pick up new terminology, but if you miss a synonym, you miss the evidence.

Subject headings search the controlled vocabulary tags assigned by the indexer. They're consistent, precise, and enormously powerful — but they require you to know the right heading to use.













***TOP TIP*** For a thorough search — especially a systematic review or comprehensive literature review — always use both subject headings and keywords together. Subject headings give you comprehensiveness; keywords catch what the subject headings miss. Combining both in a single search is the gold standard approach recommended and practiced by Information Specialists.


How to Find the Right Subject Heading

The good news: you don't have to memorise every single subject heading. Every database has a built-in thesaurus tool to help you find the right heading for your concept.

Step 1: Use the thesaurus or index tool

In Ovid MEDLINE or Ovid Embase, there's a dedicated Map Term to Subject Heading feature, or you can use the Term Finder tool.


                  

In CINAHL via EBSCOhost, use the CINAHL Headings browser. In PubMed, go to the MeSH Database (found under "Explore" in the menu). Type your concept in plain language and let the system suggest headings.

Step 2: Read the scope note

Every subject heading comes with a scope note — a brief definition explaining exactly what it covers and, crucially, what it does not cover. Always read this. It tells you whether a heading matches your concept or whether you need a different one (or several). It is also a good place to find alternative keywords

Step 3: Check the entry terms

Entry terms (sometimes called "see also" terms) are all the synonyms and variant terms that map onto this heading. If you can see your keyword in the entry terms list, you know you've found the right heading.
















Step 4: Look at the tree structure

Subject headings exist within a hierarchy — a branching tree from the very broad down to the very specific. Viewing the tree shows you what sits above your heading (broader concepts) and below it (more specific ones). This is invaluable for deciding how wide or narrow you want your search to be.















Step 5: Test with a known article

If you have a highly relevant article already, look at its subject headings in the database record. This is an excellent way to verify you have the right heading and often reveals additional headings you hadn't considered.


Broadening and Narrowing Your Search

One of the most powerful features of subject headings is the ability to control the scope of your search with surgical precision. You can deliberately cast a wider or narrower net depending on what your research question demands.

Exploding a heading — to broaden

Most databases allow you to "explode" a subject heading, which means your search automatically includes that heading and all the narrower terms beneath it in the hierarchy. This is enormously useful when you want to be comprehensive.

By exploding "Antidepressant Agent," a single subject heading retrieves articles about all antidepressants — including specific drugs — without you needing to list them individually. This is far more reliable than trying to think of every synonym yourself.












Focusing a heading — to narrow further

In some databases, particularly those using the Ovid interface, you can "focus" a subject heading (often marked with an asterisk, e.g. *Hypertension). This restricts results to articles where that heading is considered a major topic — meaning the article is primarily about that concept, rather than merely mentioning it in passing. This is useful when precision matters more than comprehensiveness.

Subheadings (qualifiers) — to narrow

Subject headings can be refined using subheadings (also called qualifiers) — these are standard modifiers that specify a particular aspect of the topic. When you select a subject heading, the database will typically offer you a menu of relevant subheadings to apply.

Common subheadings include:

  • /drug therapy - treatment with medications, e.g. Hypertension/drug therapy retrieves only articles about treating hypertension with drugs
  • /diagnosis - diagnostic aspects, e.g. Depression/diagnosis focuses on identifying and diagnosing depression
  • /surgery - surgical treatment, e.g. Breast Neoplasms/surgery limits to surgical management of breast cancer
  • /prevention & control – preventive measures
  • /epidemiology - incidence, prevalence, distribution
  • /adverse effects - unwanted effects of an intervention

Applying a subheading dramatically reduces noise while retaining highly relevant results.

The tree structure works in both directions. If your search is returning too little, move up the tree to a broader heading and explode it. If you're drowning in results, move down the tree to a more specific heading, or add a subheading to constrain the aspect you care about.

 

Differences Between Databases 

It's tempting, once you've learned MeSH, to assume the same headings will work in Embase or CINAHL. They won't — not exactly. Each database has its own vocabulary, and the headings, though often similar in concept, differ in terminology, hierarchy, and scope.

Embase's Emtree tends to have more granular terms for drugs and pharmacological interventions — useful if your search involves specific medications. CINAHL Headings include terms specific to nursing practice, patient care, and allied health that don't always exist in MeSH. If you are using multiple databases, you will need to translate your strategy into each database's own vocabulary. This can take some time but is a mark of a rigorous, comprehensive search.

Where to get help

if you need help contact the Clinical Librarians for help – we know the quirks of each thesaurus and can translate strategies reliably between databases.

Email: mtw-tr.clinical.librarians@nhs.net