Guide: How to cite a Online image or video in Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences style
Cite A Online image or video in Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences style
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Use the following template to cite a online image or video using the Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences citation style. For help with other source types, like books, PDFs, or websites, check out our other guides. To have your reference list or bibliography automatically made for you, try our free citation generator.
Key:
Pink text = information that you will need to find from the source.
Black text = text required by the Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences style.
Reference list
Place this part in your bibliography or reference list at the end of your assignment.
Template:
1. Author Surname Author Initial. Title. Year Published [Cited 2013 Oct 10]. [Cited 2013 Oct 10] Available from http://Website-Url
Example:
1. ReasonTV. Transplant Denied: How Medical Marijuana Policy Kills Patients. 2012; [Cited 2015 May 1] Available from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypF6QgoJ5Vw
In-text citation
Place this part right after the quote or reference to the source in your assignment.
Template
1
Example
Norman Smith seemed to be making progress in his liver cancer recovery at Cedars-Sinai hospital in Los Angeles, Calif. He had some of the best doctors in the world, he was on a transplant list and he had completed a successful clinical trial that had his doctors dubbing him a "miracle man." Then, his cancer returned and two months before he was would have received a transplant, he was de-listed for smoking marijuana prescribed by his oncologist at Cedars-Sinai. Now, if he doesn't receive a transplant, he will die. "It's only my life that I'm fighting for," says Smith. "What do I have to hide? I have nothing to hide." Smith's situation represents one of the first battles being fought over the place of medical marijuana in medicine and it has left him in limbo. Cedars-Sinai declined interview requests but referred Reason TV to Peggy Stewart, a clinical social worker with UCLA's transplant program, which holds a similar position to Cedars-Sinai on medical marijuana. "Marijuana is considered substance abuse," says Stewart. "The legality of it is really not an issue." Stewart and Cedars-Sinai did say that transplant patients who consume marijuana put themselves at potential risk of infection from a mold found in cannabis called aspergillus. But not everyone sees the mold as a potential threat. "The truth is that Norman lives in Los Angeles and there are laboratories that he can take his medicine to and make sure that it doesn't have contaminants," says Stephanie Sherer of Americans for Safe Access , which works to break down political and legal barriers to medical cannabis. Further, a 2009 study from the American Journal on Transplantation that looked at potential liver transplant candidates said that there wasn't a significant difference between marijuana users from marijuana non-users. Sherer points out that Smith isn't alone, his problems are the reality for many patients caught in-between managing their pain and receiving a transplant. "In our database at our office, we know of over two dozen patients that are going through this and unfortunately half of them have passed away because they did not receive these transplants," says Smith. 1
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