These are publications in which the medical community shares information. The common articles are original articles, reviews and
case reports. • Original articles describe
methods, results, discussion and conclusions and a new research that is conducted by the authors. Although according to the
evidence-based medicine consensus the
randomized controlled trials are the gold-standard for medical research, currently, they constitute only a minority of conducted research. • Reviews are an overview of one particular topic of
clinical interest in order to refresh the readers' memory, to enhance an emergence concept or the summary recent publications that haven't appeared in the textbooks yet. Other type of reviews are the
systematic reviews and the
meta-analysis in which a specific clinical dilemma is answered by collecting and summarizing all published data regarding this question. • Case reports are descriptions of clinical cases of rare phenomenon or a new clinical method. Case reports may be of value in assessing unusual medical conditions that cannot be studied in clinical trials. Currently, most of the top-ranked medical journals do not publish case reports because of space constraints or a preference for larger, more definitive studies.
Instances When looking for specific information in any journal one can use the
National Library of Medicine's
PubMed database.
Peer reviewed
journals are ranked higher thus are a better source for medical information than non-peer reviewed journals. ==Medical textbooks==