Citation Management Tools

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Health Sciences Library

Whether you're a student doing a course paper or presentation, a clinician who has found evidence for improving patient care, or a researcher writing a manuscript for publication, you need to cite the resources on which you're basing your work.

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Selecting a Citation Style

There are many different citation style guides. Below are some of the more commonly used styles in the health sciences.

**Be sure to check with your professor, supervisor, or publishing journal to confirm which style you should follow.**

Commonly Used Styles in the Health Sciences

AMA 11th Edition is the style maintained by the American Medical Association. There are a couple copies available throughout the OSU Libraries, including 1 copy on Reserve at the Health Sciences Library:

Publication Date: 2020 Publication Date: 2020

The following websites also provide helpful examples and templates for formatting your AMA citations:

The official website of AMA Style. Purdue's Online Writing Lab is a great resource for additional AMA Style examples and templates.

APA Style Manual is the style maintained by The American Psychological Association. There are many copies of the style guide available throughout the OSU Libraries, including 1 copy on Reserve at the Health Sciences Library:

Publication Date: 2019 The official website of APA Style. Purdue's Online Writing Lab is a great resource for additional APA Style examples and templates. Information and examples of APA Style citations provided by OSU Libraries.

Sometimes called "Vancouver" or "Uniform", this style is maintained by the National Library of Medicine. In addition, it is the style recommended by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) in their Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals (aka ICMJE Recommendations, formerly known as Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts).

"Citing Medicine provides assistance to authors in compiling lists of references for their publications, to editors in revising such lists, to publishers in setting reference standards for their authors and editors, and to librarians and others in formatting bibliographic citations."