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These resources provide guidance on how to cite sources in the text and on a reference list using American Medical Association (AMA) Manual of Style, 11th Ed., including examples for print and electronic sources.
Basic Legal Citation (cornell.edu). When looking up US federal bills and laws, the AMA recommends the US Government Publishing Office Federal Digital System website (https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/) and the website for the US Congress (https://www.congress.gov). Method of Citation
AMA citation format is a citation style designed by the American Medical Association. It’s frequently used in the field of medicine. You may be told to use AMA style for your student papers. You will also have to follow this style if you’re submitting a paper to a journal published by the AMA.
Below you will find example citations for the most common resource types following AMA Manual of Style Guidelines. For more information and additional reference type examples please refer to Section 1 Chapter 3 of the manual, available online for Purdue faculty, staff, and students.
Explore the 11th Edition of the AMA Manual of Style with this video featuring several of the manual’s authors, who explain how they modernized this beloved product. Find out more.
AMA Style requires you to cite the version of an item you read. An article might be available online and in a print journal. If you read the online copy, cite it using the online citation format.
Begin with the number 1 for the first citation used in your work. Place the superscript numbers just outside of periods and commas but inside of colons and semicolons. With in-text citations, if there are two authors, record the last names of both authors.
American Medical Association Style, or AMA Style, is used by some health sciences disciplines to cite medical research. This guide is divided into several sections. The main AMA page provides an overview of this citation style, who should use it and identifies online reference sources.
The AMA Manual of Style was first published in 1963, and is currently in its 11th edition (2020). This guide includes some basic and common citation styles, condensing nearly 200 pages of print content covering citing and referencing in AMA Style.
The following guidelines are based on the minimum requirements for AMA citations. AMA style requires this core information for each citation (additional details can be added where appropriate – see the relevant pages in the full UTSW AMA guide using the links on the left).