Health Sciences Citations

Citing a source means acknowledging where you got a specific quote, fact, graphic, data, or idea from.  A citation is all the information needed to describe a source, such as (but not limited to) the author, title, publisher, page numbers, and publication date. Information in citations follows a specific format or style.

Which citation style you use can depend on what subject or discipline you are writing for or on the preference of you professor.

The Health Sciences programs most often use AMA or APA citation styles.  The guides below offer help in understanding how to apply these styles. 

AMA Citations
APA Citations
Other Citation Styles
Citation Management Tools
AMA Citations

The AMA (American Medical Association) reference style was created by the editors of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). It specifies writing and citation styles for scholarly works in Medicine. AMA style is internationally recognized and is used throughout disciplines in the health sciences.

 

American Medical Association, AMA Manual of Style 11th ed., 2020.
Available to borrow from the Health Sciences Library

General resources: 

  
APA Citations

APA style is commonly used for citing references in science and social science courses. 


Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 7th ed., 2020.
Available to borrow from the Health Sciences Library

General resources: 

How to format the paper:

How to format the citations, in text and reference list: 

Other Citation Styles

These links connect to sites authored by vendors, organizations, and other academic libraries and provide documentation to some common style formats.

Citation Management Tools

There are free, easy-to-use tools to help you collect, organize, cite, and share your research sources.

With these, you can:                         

  • Create and manage citations of books, articles, websites, videos, etc.
  • Import citations directly from databases, the library catalog, Google Scholar
  • Add searchable notes and tags to citation records
  • Attach article and chapter PDFs and images to citation records
  • Easily and quickly create a bibliography in a variety of reference styles (APA, MLA, etc.)
  • Automatically manage in-text citations in Microsoft Word or LiberOffice/OpenOffice
  • Easily share references with others

Zotero and Mendeley are the two most common citation softwares.  Compare and explore or ask a librarian for help in installing and using either one. 

Zotero Library Guide

Mendeley Library Guide