 Starting on the library homepage, I'm going to select the Databases tab and enter the name of the database. Then I'll click on the Purple Connect button. At this point, if you're off campus, you'll be asked to log in with your Ohio ID and password. You'll want to make sure that you start on the library website when accessing JSTOR or any library database in order to authenticate as an Ohio University user and access the full text of articles. On the homepage for JSTOR, I'm going to go straight to the Advanced Search. I'm interested in articles from public policy and public administration journals specifically. So the first thing I'm going to do is scroll down to where I can narrow by discipline until I find Public Policy and Administration. I'm going to check the box to limit my search just to Public Policy and Administration. If I wanted to make my search a little broader, I could include other disciplines. For example, Political Science or Health Policy. This would be a good thing to try if I don't get many useful search results. But for now, I'm going to stick with Public Policy and Administration. In the search fields at the top, I'll enter Health Care and Rural Communities. Notice that I'm putting these in quotations, so JSTOR will search for them as phrases rather than searching for each word separately. This will keep my search results more focused on my topic. Finally, I'm going to limit to articles and then hit Search. So I get 97 search results sorted by relevance. If I wanted to, I could resort my results with the newest or oldest articles first. This top article looks good to me, so I'm going to click on the title. At the top, under Tools, I have the option to view PDF. I can also email this citation to myself so I can get back to this page easily later. Some of the results have an icon next to them indicating that they link to external content. When I click on the title of that article, it tells me the full text is not in JSTOR, but I may have access to it elsewhere through the Ohio University Library. To find out if I do, I'll click on Find It. This tells me we do have access to this article through a couple other databases. In some cases, you might not see a link under Full Text, which means we don't have access to an online version of that article. At that point, your next step is to request this item through Interlibrary Loan. We'll obtain the article from another library and provide you with a digital copy. I hope this has been helpful. If you have any questions about finding...