Academic Citations

Properly citing and referencing academic sources in clinical and research documentation.

Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs)

What is a DOI?

A DOI (Digital Object Identifier) is a unique, permanent identification number assigned to academic publications. DOIs provide a standardized way to locate documents regardless of where they are stored online.

DOI Formatting Requirements

Required Format: https://doi.org/xxxxx

Alternative Acceptable Format: http://doi.org/xxxxx

DOI Usage Rules

  1. Always use DOI when available - If a publication has a DOI, use the DOI instead of a URL
  2. Copy and paste directly - Copy DOIs exactly from the source to avoid errors
  3. No additional text - Do not use "Retrieved from" or "Accessed from" before a DOI
  4. No period after DOI - Do not add punctuation after the DOI
  5. Live hyperlinks preferred - Present DOIs as clickable links when publishing online

Display Options

  • Use default hyperlink display (typically blue, underlined text), OR
  • Use plain text format without underlining
  • Maintain consistency throughout your document

URLs (Uniform Resource Locators)

When to Use URLs

Use URLs only when:

  • No DOI is available for the publication
  • The work is from a website that does not assign DOIs

URL Formatting Requirements

  1. Complete URL required - Copy the full web address from your browser
  2. No additional text - Do not use "Retrieved from" before URLs
  3. No period after URL - Do not add punctuation after the URL
  4. Maintain exact formatting - Preserve all characters and spacing exactly
  5. Live hyperlinks preferred - Make URLs clickable when publishing online

URL Guidelines

  • Use the most direct, stable URL available
  • Avoid URLs that require login credentials
  • Test URLs before finalizing citations to ensure they work correctly

Special Cases

Database Sources

If accessing articles through research databases:

  • Use the DOI if available (preferred method)
  • If no DOI exists, do not include database URLs or database names
  • Treat the reference as if citing a print version

Retrieval Dates

Generally, do not include retrieval dates. Only include retrieval dates when:

  • The content is not archived
  • The content may be updated or changed over time

Formatting in Word Processors

  • URLs and DOIs may break across lines - allow natural line breaks
  • Do not manually insert hyphens in URLs or DOIs
  • Break before punctuation marks when possible

Quick Reference

ElementUse WhenFormatNotes
DOIAvailable for publicationhttps://doi.org/xxxxxAlways preferred over URL
URLNo DOI availablehttps://example.com/articleDirect link to content
Retrieval DateContent may changeNot typically requiredRare exceptions only

Common Errors to Avoid

  • Adding periods after DOIs or URLs
  • Using "Retrieved from" before DOIs or URLs
  • Including database-specific URLs that require login
  • Manually typing DOIs instead of copying/pasting
  • Using outdated DOI formats (e.g., dx.doi.org)

More Resources