Vancouver Citation Style: Complete Guide with Examples

Vancouver style is the standard citation system for biomedical and health sciences research. Used by thousands of journals including The Lancet, JAMA, and BMJ, it assigns a number to each source in the order it first appears in the text — and those numbers stay with that source throughout the paper. This guide covers the format for every major source type with complete examples.


How Vancouver In-Text Citations Work

Each source receives a number when first cited. That number appears in the text as a superscript or in parentheses/brackets, depending on the journal’s house style. Once assigned, the same number is reused every time that source is cited again.

Format variantExample
Superscript (most common)…as previously reported.¹
Brackets…as previously reported [1].
Parentheses…as previously reported (1).

The punctuation mark (period, comma) goes after the citation number, not before it. Multiple sources in one location are listed together: ¹·²·³ or [1,2,3].

Journal Article

1. Patel RA, Chen M, Singh LP. Deep learning for early detection of diabetic retinopathy: a systematic review. Lancet Digit Health. 2024;6(4):e312-e325. doi:10.1016/S2589-7500(24)00045-2

Structure: Author(s). Title. Journal abbreviation. Year;Volume(Issue):Pages. doi

FieldFormat
AuthorsLast name + initials, no periods after initials; up to 6 authors listed, then «et al.»
Article titleSentence case; no italics, no quotes
Journal nameStandard abbreviation, italicized (or as the journal specifies)
Year;Volume(Issue)No space before semicolon or colon
PagesFirst and last page; abbreviated if same hundreds
DOIdoi: or https://doi.org/

Book

2. Greenhalgh T. How to Read a Paper: The Basics of Evidence-Based Medicine and Healthcare. 6th ed. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell; 2019.

Chapter in an Edited Book

3. Sackett DL. Bias in analytic research. In: Rothman KJ, Greenland S, Lash TL, editors. Modern Epidemiology. 3rd ed. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2008. p. 54-79.

Website

4. World Health Organization. Global tuberculosis report 2023 [Internet]. Geneva: WHO; 2023 [cited 2025 Mar 12]. Available from: https://www.who.int/teams/global-tuberculosis-programme/tb-reports/global-tuberculosis-report-2023

Thesis or Dissertation

5. Okonkwo SK. Machine learning approaches for predicting sepsis outcomes in ICU patients [dissertation]. London: University College London; 2023.

Conference Paper

6. Kim J, Park S, Lee H. Federated learning for privacy-preserving clinical NLP. In: Proceedings of the 2024 Conference on Health Informatics; 2024 May 14-16; Seoul, South Korea. Seoul: KHIA; 2024. p. 112-118.

Vancouver vs. APA vs. IEEE: Quick Comparison

FeatureVancouverAPAIEEE
In-text formatSuperscript number (¹) or [1](Author, year)[1]
Reference orderOrder of first citationAlphabetical by authorOrder of first citation
Author formatLast name + initials (Smith AB)Last name, initials (Smith, A. B.)Initials + last name (A. B. Smith)
Article title caseSentence case, no quotesSentence case, no quotesSentence case, in quotes
Journal nameAbbreviated, italicizedFull name, italicizedAbbreviated, italicized
Primary fieldMedicine, nursing, health sciencesPsychology, social sciencesEngineering, CS

Common Mistakes

  • Restarting the numbering — numbers run consecutively through the whole paper; never reset for a new section
  • Using more than 6 authors before «et al.» — Vancouver lists up to 6 authors, then adds «et al.»
  • Putting the citation number before the punctuation — in Vancouver, the number comes after the period or comma¹, not before
  • Italicizing article titles — in Vancouver, only journal names are italicized; article titles are plain text

For a full guide to Vancouver citations including clinical trial reports and grey literature, see the Vancouver citation center.

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