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Endnote journal abbreviation dot
Endnote journal abbreviation dot






endnote journal abbreviation dot

The PubMed citation is not in the Vancouver style, but it is acceptable for new submissions to the MJA.

endnote journal abbreviation dot

For accurate references to biomedical journals, check the reference in PubMed’s Single Citation Matcher and copy the PubMed citation into your document.

  • Tip for accurate journal references: Typing errors often render references inaccurate.
  • Home page URLs are also unacceptable unless the information referenced is contained on that page - the URL of the final destination must be given.
  • For internet references, URLs alone are unacceptable please include all conventional details as far as possible (ie, author, title, publishing body, place of publication, year of publication) and the date that you accessed the web page (as web content may change or be updated).
  • For all non-journal references, including conference publications, newspaper articles and electronic media, please consult the National Library of Medicine's Citing Medicine for the required detail and format.
  • Cite personal communications and unpublished articles in the text, not in the reference list and obtain written permission from people cited, giving their titles, positions and affiliations.
  • If relevant, specify the type of reference (eg, a letter, an editorial, an abstract, a supplement). Give surnames and initials of all authors (or only the first three authors with "et al" if there are more than four) and cite first and last page numbers in full (these two requirements are slightly different from the Vancouver style).
  • Use the "Vancouver style" and abbreviate journal names as in PubMed.
  • Do NOT submit references in endnote or footnote format as our automated systems cannot currently process these.
  • Examples of acceptable reference format can be found here.
  • Compile a reference list at the end of the text by typing the list of references and add the corresponding number to the body of the text.
  • The accuracy of references is the responsibility of authors.
  • Do not express P values as anything smaller than P < 0.001.
  • Report P values to two decimal places unless P < 0.01, in which case use three decimal places.
  • endnote journal abbreviation dot

    Do not use percentages if the denominator is < 100, and round up percentages to one decimal place for denominators of 100–1000, or two decimal places for denominators greater than 1000. Provide absolute numbers (with denominators) in addition to percentages.Refer to drugs by their generic (not their proprietary) names.Provide reference intervals when reporting laboratory findings.Give all measurements in standard international (SI) units (except blood pressure, which is in mmHg).Use abbreviations sparingly (spell out at first use).The following style is used for articles published by The Medical Journal of Australia ( MJA). Statistics,epidemiology and research design.Statistics, epidemiology and research design.








    Endnote journal abbreviation dot