PICO is a device to help ask good clinical questions, and it can also be used to help focus and search databases for peer-reviewed articles that answer those questions.
Most clinical research develops from an idea or scenario like the following:
You are a nurse working with a mother and her daughter, who suffers from epilepsy. The mother is aware that North Dakota has legalized medical marijuana and wants to know if that would be a safe option for her daughter. Apart from basic news stories, you haven’t heard much about medical marijuana and decide to investigate.
We can use PICO to pull out the keywords that will help us search.
On the table below, you can see what each letter in PICO stands for, and how to use that to develop keywords from the scenario above. Once keywords are identified, it is important to also think about some synonyms or related concepts to also try when searching.
P | I | C | O | |
Stands for: | Patient, Population or Problem | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome |
Keywords: | Female, child, epilepsy | Medical Marijuana | NA | Safety |
Synonyms: | Pediatric, seizures, seizure disorder | Cannabis, cannabidiol | NA | Adverse Effects |
Once you have your keywords developed, then you can decide where you want to search. If you’re not sure, check out one of the library’s subject-specific research guides. When you start searching, use 2-4 of the first keywords that you came up with. Evaluate the results, and change your search using other terms and database filters as needed. Check out these tutorials for further information: