Style request for 'The International Quarterly of Community Health Education'

Could someone please help with a new style for "The International Quarterly of Community Health Education"
The style is basically Vancouver but with the additional feature of adding DOI for items that have it and url for items without DOI. This feature is available in the style for "Modern Humanities Research Association 3rd edition". The specific instructions for the references is pasted below. Thank you.

"References should relate only to material cited within text and be listed in numerical order according to their appearance within text. State author’s name, title of referenced work, editor’s name, title of book or periodical, volume, issue, pages cited, year of publication, and DOI (digital object identifier)"
  • https://github.com/citation-style-language/styles/wiki/Requesting-Styles
    I need, as a minimum, either a more expressive style guide or a link to a freely available paper.
  • edited September 24, 2013
    All their articles are for sale. Will buy one soon and let you see it.
    Thanks.
  • I am looking for this citation too. I can supply a paper.
  • See the link above. If we get the citations described there -- i.e. the Mares and the Campbell and Petersen works -- formatted for IQCHE, we'll be a lot closer.
  • Campbell JL and Pedersen OK. The varieties of capitalism and hybrid success. Comp Polit Stud 2007; 40(3): 307–332. doi:10.1177/0010414006286542

    How they handle more than three names:

    Cadigan JM, Haeny AM, Martens MP, et al.

    I am not sure this one is correct:

    Mares, I. Firms and the welfare state: When, why, and how does social policy matter to employers? Varieties of capitalism. The institutional foundations of comparative advantage . In Hall PA and Soskice D (eds). pp. 184–213. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2001.

    Here is an example from a recent article:
    Metzl J and Kirkland A (eds). Against health: how health became the new morality. New York, NY: New York University Press, 2010.



    "References should relate only to material cited within text and be listed in numerical order according to their appearance within text. State author’s name, title of referenced work, editor’s name, title of book or periodical, volume, issue, pages cited, year of publication, and DOI (digital object identifier)."

    https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/international-quarterly-of-community-health-education/journal202401#submission-guidelines

    ISSN:
    0272-684X (Print)
    1541-3519 (Electronic)
    0272-684X (Linking)
  • Although, after looking at recent papers not many list doi, even though they have it in their instructions for formatting references.
  • http://qch.sagepub.com/content/35/1.toc

    There are some free papers, but they are a little older (2014).
  • the references for those look very different:
    C. MacNeil, The Prose and Cons of Poetic Representation in Evaluation Reporting, American Journal of Evaluation, 21:3, pp. 359-367, 2000. doi: 10.1016/S1098-2140(01)00100-X

    Is that no longer the style they use?
  • edited May 8, 2016
    They might not, I am looking at the latest journal issue (2016) and the references look like this:

    Journal

    Brownson RC, Fielding JE and Maylahn CM. Evidence-based
    public health: a fundamental concept for public health practice.
    Annu Rev Publ Health 2009; 30: 175–201.

    or

    Hurd T, Muti P, Erwin D, et al. An evaluation of the integration
    of non-traditional learning tools into a community based breast
    and cervical cancer education program: the witness project of
    buffalo. BMC Cancer 2003; 3: 18.

    Book

    Searle J. Freedom and neurobiology: reflections on free will, lan-
    guage and political power. New York, NY: Columbia University
    Press, 2004.

    or

    Durie M, Milroy H and Hunter E. Mental health and the indi-
    genous peoples of Australia and New Zealand. In: Kirmayer LJ
    and Valaskakis GG (eds) Healing traditions: The mental health of
    aboriginal peoples in Canada. Vancouver, Canada: UBC, 2009, pp.36–55.

    Web

    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National center for
    injury prevention and control web-based injury statistics query
    and reporting system (WISQARS) (web-based statistical query),
    2005. http://www.cdc.gov/injury/wisqars/.

    They may not have updated the reference list requirements, but it still states on the author's page:

    "References should relate only to material cited within text and be listed in numerical order according to their appearance within text. State author’s name, title of referenced work, editor’s name, title of book or periodical, volume, issue, pages cited, year of publication, and DOI (digital object identifier)."
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