I have access through my institution so I am not sure if there is free access onine, but there is a PDF from JAMA if you search - What's New in AMA Style - AMA Manual of Style This brings me through my proxy server but it is probably available without a password. Thanks
Hi @kathygrams I had a look. The only differences that I see and that are possible with CSL are: - remove publisher-place for books - put URL for websites at end and remove dot at end - format blogs/posts (e.g. Twitter) like websites - (add DOI with no dot at the end. We already had that) - for journal articles without volume+page and with DOI or URL: add "Published online date" (for datasets, we cannot make a difference with "published" or "deposited" as far as I know if both items are saved as article-journal)
2. Guyatt G, Rennie D, Meade M, Cook D. Users’ Guides to the Medical Literature: A Manual for Evidence-Based Clinical Practice. 3rd ed.; 2015.
3. Prince M, Glozier N, Sousa R, Dewey M. Measuring disability across physical, mental and cognitive disorders. In: The Conceptual Evolution of DSM-5. American Psychiatric Publishing, Washington, DC; 2011:189–227.
4. Quiroz YT, Schultz AP, Chen K, et al. Brain imaging and blood biomarker abnormalities in children with autosomal dominant Alzheimer disease: a cross-sectional study. JAMA neurology. 2015;72(8):912–919. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.1099
5. Meeker D, Linder JA, Fox CR, et al. Effect of behavioral interventions on inappropriate antibiotic prescribing among primary care practices: a randomized clinical trial. Jama. 2016;315(6):562–570.
6. Tamburini S, Shen N, Wu HC, Clemente JC. The microbiome in early life: implications for health outcomes. Nature medicine. Published online July 7, 2016. doi:10.1038/nm4142
I was just about to request this! Thank you, Dan Stillman! Having the DOI's in the citations would be very helpful along with switching to the footnote citations for AMA.
I was just about to request this! Thank you, Dan Stillman! Having the DOI's in the citations would be very helpful along with switching to the footnote citations for AMA.
AMA style already has DOI and is not and will not be in footnotes, so this seems like a misunderstanding (also, Dan does a lot, but is actually not at all involved with this part)
This brings me through my proxy server but it is probably available without a password.
Thanks
Does this include ALL the changes needed? https://www.amamanualofstyle.com/fileasset/AMAMOS/aaaAMWA presentation Nov 2019 FULL.pdf
If so I can certainly start working on it.
I had a look. The only differences that I see and that are possible with CSL are:
- remove publisher-place for books
- put URL for websites at end and remove dot at end
- format blogs/posts (e.g. Twitter) like websites
- (add DOI with no dot at the end. We already had that)
- for journal articles without volume+page and with DOI or URL: add "Published online date" (for datasets, we cannot make a difference with "published" or "deposited" as far as I know if both items are saved as article-journal)
I edited the current style to mirror that. Check it out.
Right click, save as, and install in Zotero:
https://github.com/citation-style-language/styles/raw/00efd3d8debd89574e5ab153e333a87c4f39f1d6/american-medical-association.csl
(note that this still will be overwritten the next time Zotero is updated as the ID is already used by AMA10th)
Test outputs with some of the items in the guidelines that you sent me per email:
1. Etzel R, Balk S, eds. Pediatric Environmental Health. American Academy of Pediatrics; 2011. Accessed August 15, 2015. https://jamaevidence.mhmedical.com/book.aspx?bookID=847
2. Guyatt G, Rennie D, Meade M, Cook D. Users’ Guides to the Medical Literature: A Manual for Evidence-Based Clinical Practice. 3rd ed.; 2015.
3. Prince M, Glozier N, Sousa R, Dewey M. Measuring disability across physical, mental and cognitive disorders. In: The Conceptual Evolution of DSM-5. American Psychiatric Publishing, Washington, DC; 2011:189–227.
4. Quiroz YT, Schultz AP, Chen K, et al. Brain imaging and blood biomarker abnormalities in children with autosomal dominant Alzheimer disease: a cross-sectional study. JAMA neurology. 2015;72(8):912–919. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.1099
5. Meeker D, Linder JA, Fox CR, et al. Effect of behavioral interventions on inappropriate antibiotic prescribing among primary care practices: a randomized clinical trial. Jama. 2016;315(6):562–570.
6. Tamburini S, Shen N, Wu HC, Clemente JC. The microbiome in early life: implications for health outcomes. Nature medicine. Published online July 7, 2016. doi:10.1038/nm4142