Elaboration of references

Use of reference management software

Priority will be given to contributions that deliver references standardized by using any reference management software such as: Zotero, Bibme, Reference Manager, RefWorks, EndNote, or any other compatible with scientific-medical edition.

References’ DOI

When applicable —particularly in references to electronic documents— the corresponding DOI must be provided. 

Vancouver citation style

Vancouver citation style will be utilized. References must be listed and numbered in their order of appearance, with the corresponding citation as a superscript (no parentheses, no spaces, separated by commas and dashes in the case of more than two in a row). They will be copy-pasted as in the cited source, this is: authors, article title, journal name, year, period, volume, number, pages and DOI (if applicable). 

Journal articles: a) Surnames and initials of all the authors; b) article title; c) name or initials of the journal; d) year; volume (number): pages.

  1. Ennis SS, Guo H, Raman L, Tambyah PA, Chen SL, Tiong HY. Premenopausal women with recurrent urinary tract infections have lower quality of life. Int J Urol. 2018;25(7):684–9, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/iju.13698.

Books: a) Surnames and initials of all the authors; b) title and subtitle; c) edition (if it is not the first); d) city; e) publishing house; f) year.

  1. Gray, M, Moore K. Urologic Disorders: Adult and Pediatric Care: Adult and Pediatric Care, St. Louis Missouri, Mosby Elsevier, 2009.

 

Book chapter: a) Surnames and initials of all the authors of the chapter; b) chapter title; c) editors, authors, compilers of the book; d) book title; e) edition (if it is not the first); f) city; g) publishing house; h) year; i) pages.

  1. Jansen PK, Albaugh JA. Erectile dysfuntion: Identification, assesment, treatment, and follow-up. Lajiness M. & Quallich S. (eds). The nurse practitioner in urology, Switzerland, Springer, 2016, p. 83-118, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28743-0_4