Note: you only see the purple Find it NM Galter icon in PubMed if you started your PubMed session with the URL linked above. If you encounter problems at this point, send us a message so we can investigate your account. This will take you back to the Galter website and you will be informed if the library has it in full-text and prompted to sign in if we do if we don’t have it in full-text, you’ll be given the link to request it through interlibrary loan. If you don’t, try the other link: the purple Find it NM Galter icon. If you’re logged into the VPN or use the proxy bookmarklet AND we subscribe through that publisher directly, you will usually get into the full-text. One of them will likely be the publisher website. This is the one linked from our home page and has the following URL: When you get to the PubMed abstract of an article you want to read, there may be a number of full-text options. I'm in PubMed or another database and come across an article I want to read.įirst, we recommend that you bookmark and use the Galter/NU version of PubMed. The proxy bookmarklet is prompting you to log into the Galter Library website and then re-routing you back to the publisher website. This is really a combination of options 2 and 3 above. If you are not logged into VPN and you have the proxy bookmarklet installed, clicking it should prompt you for a NetID login. If you are already logged into NU VPN (option 1), which is the best practice, it should take you to the full-text, assuming we get the article through that publisher. I'm searching on Google or UpToDate and come across an article I want to read. This isn’t necessarily the final word on whether we have it you should then check/search the library website to see if we get the journal through a different source. If it doesn’t take you to the full-text or prompt you to log in with your NetID, then take you through, then we probably don’t subscribe to the journal through that website.
If you are already logged in with your NetID, and you click the bookmarklet in your toolbar while on the website of a journal to which we subscribe, it should either (a) take you to the full-text if you are logged in with your NetID on that particular browser or (b) prompt you to log in with your NetID, then take you to the full-text. Option 3: Galter Library proxy button/bookmarklet: we’ve done some testing and this appears to still work however we have had reports of it not working for some users, which is why we don't recommend it as a primary access method. For example, if you click PubMed on our home page and have not yet logged in with your NetID, then you will be prompted to do so. Click the Sign In option in the top-right corner of the home page or log in when prompted with your NetID. Option 2: Galter Library website login (proxy): the next most reliable. You can always search for the journal title on our website to see if there’s another way to get in.
It doesn’t mean we don’t have access, it just means a direct download from that source isn’t available. However, if we don’t subscribe to that journal through that particular publisher (sometimes we subscribe through aggregators like Ebsco or Ovid) then you will probably be denied access on this site. If you are on a publisher site and we subscribe to a journal directly from that publisher, then you should be passed right through to the full-text.
Log into NU VPN before you start any searching and your connection should mimic an on-campus one. Option 1: NU VPN: this is really the most reliable option. Here are our recommendations for the smoothest access depending on your preferred workflow. Ideally you could access every journal article or online book with the click of a button, but there’s usually some technical or budgetary reason why that can’t happen.