The AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors is the official style guide published by the American Medical Association (AMA), offering comprehensive instructions for authors, editors, and publishers in the biomedical sciences to ensure clarity, consistency, and precision in medical writing and editing.[1] First issued in October 1962 as a concise 68-page internal manual for AMA scientific journals, it has expanded significantly over time to address evolving standards in scientific communication.[1]The manual's development reflects the growing complexity of medical publishing, with the 7th edition in 1981 marking its first external publication under the title Manual for Authors & Editors, and subsequent editions incorporating broader international perspectives and digital-era considerations.[1] The 10th edition, released in 2007, spanned 1032 pages, while the current 11th edition, published in 2020 after a five-year revision by a committee of JAMA Network editors, exceeds 1100 pages and introduces full-color data displays, updated citation rules for emerging formats like social media, and revised guidance on ethical issues such as authorship and open access.[1][2]Key features include detailed chapters on grammar, punctuation, nomenclature (e.g., genetics and pharmaceuticals), statistics, study design, and manuscript preparation, alongside tools like an online units-of-measure calculator and style quizzes available in the digital version.[1][2] Its emphasis on numerical superscript citations, patient-centered terminology, and inclusive usage—such as the singular "they"—standardizes practices across AMA journals like JAMA and influences broader health sciences publishing.[2] Widely regarded as indispensable for producing well-organized manuscripts, the manual promotes ethical and accurate dissemination of scientific knowledge, with ongoing online updates to maintain relevance.[1]
History and Development
Origins and Initial Publication
The American Medical Association (AMA) initiated the development of its Manual of Style to establish standardized guidelines for editorial practices in its scientific journals, particularly the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), which had been publishing since 1883. This effort addressed the increasing need for consistency in medical manuscript preparation, editing, and production as the volume of submissions grew. The manual originated as an internal resource to ensure uniformity in style, workflow, and procedures among AMA editors.[1][3]The first edition was published in October 1962, consisting of 68 pages focused on core elements of style conventions, editing techniques, and production processes. It served primarily as a practical guide for in-house use by authors, editors, and production staff affiliated with AMA publications, reflecting the association's commitment to rigorous standards in biomedical communication. This inaugural version laid the foundation for subsequent expansions, emphasizing clarity, precision, and scientific integrity in medical writing.[1]
Evolution of Editions
The first edition of the AMA Manual of Style was published in October 1962 as a 68-page internal guide primarily for the editorial staff of the American Medical Association's (AMA) scientific journals, focusing on basic conventions for manuscript preparation and journal production.[1] A second edition appeared in 1963, expanding slightly to 90 pages while retaining its in-house orientation.[1]Early subsequent editions built incrementally on this foundation, with the sixth edition in 1976 increasing to 154 pages and the seventh in 1981 reaching 183 pages under the title Manual for Authors & Editors, signaling a shift toward broader applicability beyond AMA insiders.[1] By the eighth edition in 1989, the manual had grown substantially to 377 pages, introducing a committee of 10 editors and dedicating 54 pages to nomenclature guidelines, which reflected growing complexity in medical terminology standardization; this edition sold 33,000 copies.[1]The ninth edition (1997) further expanded to 660 pages, with nomenclature sections tripling to 130 pages, alongside new 60-page coverage of statistical methods and 85 pages on ethical considerations in publishing, addressing rising demands for rigor in data presentation and authorship integrity; it achieved sales of 44,000 copies.[1] The tenth edition in 2007, published by Oxford University Press, ballooned to 1,032 pages, incorporating medical subject indexes, extending legal and ethical guidance to 175 pages, nomenclature to 247 pages, and emphasizing international publishing norms amid globalization of medical research.[1]
The eleventh edition, released in 2020 after a five-year revision process, comprises nearly 1,200 pages across 23 chapters, omitting a standalone indexing section in favor of integrated guidance, adding full-color graphics for visual elements, and enabling ongoing online updates to accommodate rapid changes in digital publishing and citation formats.[1] Throughout its evolution, the manual has transitioned from a concise operational tool to a comprehensive reference, adapting to advancements in scientific communication, such as electronic references in the tenth edition and evolving standards for reproducibility and transparency in later iterations.[1][4]
Editorial Process and Updates
The AMA Manual of Style is developed and maintained by the AMA Manual of Style Committee, a group of 10 professional editors affiliated with the JAMA Network, who oversee revisions to its chapters and policy guidelines.[1][5] This committee, which includes members such as Stacy L. Christiansen (MA), Annette Flanagin (RN, MA), and Phil B. Fontanarosa (MD), draws on expertise from JAMA Network editorial staff to ensure the manual addresses evolving needs in medical and scientific publishing.[6]The editorial process for new editions involves systematic review and revision by the full committee. For the 11th edition, published in 2020, the 10 members revised all 23 chapters over a five-year period, incorporating regular meetings to discuss proposed changes, consultations with subject-matter experts, iterative drafts, and external peer reviews to refine content on topics ranging from manuscript preparation to ethical standards.[1] This collaborative approach expanded the manual from its origins as a 68-page in-house document in 1962 to nearly 1,200 pages, reflecting accumulated refinements in areas like nomenclature, statistics, and data visualization.[1][7]Beyond full editions, the committee implements continuous updates to address emerging issues in publishing practices. These policy changes are developed through ongoing committee deliberations and are posted directly to the online version of the manual as they are finalized, ensuring users access the most current guidelines without awaiting a new print edition.[1] Corrections and minor revisions are similarly integrated online, with notifications provided via the manual's dedicated updates section to maintain accuracy and relevance in rapidly evolving fields like digital multimedia and inclusive terminology.[1] This iterative mechanism allows the manual to adapt to feedback from JAMA Network publications and broader scientific community input, prioritizing evidence-based refinements over static rules.[8]
Core Guidelines and Content
Grammar, Usage, and Style Conventions
The AMA Manual of Style, 11th edition (2020), dedicates dedicated chapters to grammar, punctuation, correct and preferred usage, abbreviations, plurals, and capitalization to promote clarity, precision, and consistency in medical and scientific writing. These conventions prioritize avoiding common errors such as ambiguous pronoun references, faulty parallelism, and misplaced modifiers, which can obscure scientific meaning. For example, the manual advises structuring sentences to maintain subject-verb agreement even with interrupting phrases and using active voice judiciously to enhance readability without sacrificing objectivity.[9][10]Punctuation rules emphasize logical flow and minimalism suited to technical prose. Commas separate elements in series (including the serial comma before the conjunction in lists of three or more items), set off nonrestrictive clauses, and follow introductory phrases; semicolons link independent clauses or items in complex lists; colons introduce lists or explanations. Dashes provide emphasis or parenthetical interruptions, while hyphens join compound modifiers before nouns (e.g., "well-established protocol"). Quotation marks follow American style (periods and commas inside), and parentheses enclose citations or supplemental data without disrupting sentence rhythm.[11]Abbreviations must be defined at first mention (e.g., "American Medical Association (AMA)"), with subsequent uses in short form; periods are omitted except in "No." for number and "St." in names. Acronyms like DNA or ECG appear without internal periods or spaces. State names expand fully in text (e.g., "California" not "CA") unless in datelines or addresses.[12][13]Numbers follow a hybrid approach: spell out integers one through nine (or zero) in nontechnical contexts, but use Arabic numerals for 10 and above, measurements (e.g., "5 mg"), percentages (e.g., "7%"), dates (e.g., "October 27, 2025"), and statistical data. Exceptions include spelling out numbers in titles or quotations and avoiding adjacent numerals by spelling one (e.g., "three 5-mg doses"). Decimals use leading zeros (e.g., "0.05"), and ranges employ en dashes (e.g., "5-10").[14]Capitalization adheres to sentence case for article and chapter titles (capitalizing only the first word, proper nouns, and initial words after colons), while headings use title case. Drug names retain generic lowercase unless proper nouns (e.g., "ibuprofen"), and eponyms like Apgar score capitalize the surname.[15][16]The usage glossary addresses frequent confusions, such as distinguishing "affect" (verb) from "effect" (noun), "that" (restrictive clauses) from "which" (nonrestrictive), and "comprise" (includes) from "compose" (constitutes). It favors concise terms over verbose alternatives (e.g., "use" over "utilize") and cautions against causal language in observational studies unless evidence supports it.[17]
Manuscript Structure and Formatting
The AMA Manual of Style, 11th edition (2020), outlines manuscript preparation guidelines primarily for biomedical journal submissions, emphasizing clarity, logical organization, and adherence to ethical standards in scientific communication.[18] Manuscripts typically follow a structured format to facilitate peer review and publication, with components including a title page, abstract, main text, references, and supplementary materials. This structure supports the IMRAD (Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion) model for original research articles, which promotes reproducibility and separation of empirical data from interpretation.[19]The title page serves as the initial submission element, containing the article title (concise, informative, and avoiding abbreviations), full author names with degrees and affiliations, corresponding author details including contact information, disclosures of conflicts of interest, and word count.[20] Keywords or MeSH terms follow the abstract on this page or a subsequent one, limited to 3-10 terms to aid indexing.[21]Abstracts precede the main text and must be structured for research manuscripts, comprising Background (context and objective), Methods (design, setting, participants, interventions, and analysis), Results (key findings with confidence intervals or P values), and Conclusions (implications without overstatement). Unstructured abstracts apply to other article types like reviews; length is capped at 250-300 words depending on journal policy.[22]The main text organizes content hierarchically, starting with Introduction (background, rationale, and objectives), followed by Methods (detailed protocols for replication), Results (objective data presentation without discussion), and Discussion (interpretation, limitations, and implications). Additional subsections such as Acknowledgments, References, Tables, Figures, and Appendices appear afterward; supplementary materials (e.g., detailed methods or data sets) are submitted separately.[21]Formatting requirements prioritize readability: use 1-inch margins on all sides, 12-point font in a readable typeface like Times New Roman or Arial, and double-spacing throughout the manuscript, including block quotes and references, with no hyphenation or justification on the right margin.[23]Page numbering starts from the title page in the upper right corner; headings employ a consistent four-level system—Level 1 bold and left-aligned, Level 2 italicized and left-aligned, Level 3 bold italicized and indented, Level 4 italicized and indented—to delineate sections without numbering unless specified.[24] Manuscripts are submitted as editable files (e.g., Microsoft Word .docx), with tables and figures embedded or as separate files per journal instructions.[25] These guidelines, detailed in Chapter 2 of the manual, adapt slightly by journal but ensure uniformity in AMA-affiliated publications like JAMA, reducing ambiguity in scientific reporting.[26]
References, Citations, and Bibliography
The AMA Manual of Style, in its 11th edition published in 2020, prescribes a numerical citation system designed for efficiency in biomedical publishing, where references are cited in the order of appearance using superscript Arabic numerals placed outside periods and commas.[27] This approach contrasts with author-date systems like APA, which embed names and years parenthetically, by instead linking citations to a sequentially numbered list titled "References" at the document's end, avoiding alphabetical reordering and reducing textual disruption.[28] The system supports up to six authors listed fully before using "et al." for additional ones, prioritizing brevity while maintaining traceability.[29]In-text citations begin with the numeral 1 for the first referenced source and increment consecutively, with repeated citations reusing the original number rather than introducing duplicates; for direct quotations, a hyphenated range (e.g., 2-4) denotes spans, and semicolons separate non-consecutive citations within the same superscript (e.g., 3;5;7).[30] This format accommodates the dense referencing common in medical manuscripts, where empirical claims demand precise sourcing to uphold reproducibility, though it requires authors to finalize citation order during editing to avoid renumbering.[31] Unlike Vancouver style, which shares numerical roots but varies in punctuation and abbreviation, AMA mandates no parentheses around superscripts and insists on full journal titles abbreviated per National Library of Medicine standards.[32]The reference list entries are single-spaced within items and double-spaced between, with DOIs preferred over URLs when available for permanence, reflecting a shift in the 11th edition toward digital stability amid evolving online archiving practices.[18] Journal articles follow the format: Author AA, Author BB. Article Title. Abbrev Journal Abbrev. Year;Volume(Issue):Page range. doi:10.XXXX/XXXXX, as in: Smith J, Doe A. Advances in vaccine efficacy. JAMA. 2020;323(5):456-467. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.1234.[33]Books are cited as: Author AA. Book Title. Edition. Publisher; Year:page range if applicable, emphasizing verified publisher details to counter citation errors prevalent in preprint-heavy fields.[27] Websites require accessed dates only if content is likely to change, formatted as: Author AA. Title of Page. Site Name. Published Month Day, Year. Accessed Month Day, Year. URL, underscoring caution against ephemeral sources in evidence-based reporting.Special cases include preprints, treated as unpublished works with repository details (e.g., medRxiv), and legal references adhering to Bluebook conventions for cross-disciplinary consistency, though the manual critiques over-reliance on non-peer-reviewed materials without rigorous validation.[34] Data supplements or datasets are cited similarly to journals if formally published, with emphasis on including persistent identifiers to enable causal verification in reproducibility-focused research.[35] Overall, these guidelines enforce causal traceability by mandating primary empirical sources where possible, while the manual's editorial updates address biases in citation practices, such as inflating self-cites, through recommendations for diverse, high-impact referencing.[10]
Visual Elements: Tables, Figures, and Multimedia
The AMA Manual of Style, 11th edition, dedicates Section 4 to the visual presentation of data, emphasizing tables, figures, and multimedia as essential tools for conveying complex information in medical and scientific manuscripts.[36] These elements must prioritize clarity, accuracy, and reproducibility, with authors advised to use them only when they enhance understanding beyond text alone, avoiding redundancy or unnecessary complexity.[37] Tables suit categorical or numerical comparisons, figures depict trends or spatial relationships, and multimedia extends to dynamic content like videos for online supplements. Placement should be as close as possible to their first textual reference, with consecutive numbering based on order of mention.[38]Tables require a bolded title above the table in title case, preceded by an identifier such as "Table 1."[39] Content should use horizontal lines sparingly—typically only top, bottom, and under headings—to maintain simplicity, with footnotes denoted by superscript lowercase letters or symbols for explanations, abbreviations, or statistical notes.[40] Data must be verifiable, with authors ensuring statistical integrity and disclosing any manipulations; for instance, probability values should align with reported data to prevent misleading inferences.[37] Permissions are mandatory for reproducing tables from other sources, except for original author-created content or public domain material.[41]Figures encompass photographs, graphs, charts, diagrams, and illustrations, each requiring a legend below in sentence case, starting with the identifier (e.g., "Figure 1") and including scale, units, and source credits if applicable.[42] High-resolution files (at least 300 dpi) are specified for print, with color used judiciously to avoid accessibility issues in grayscale reproduction.[37] Ethical considerations include patient anonymity in clinical images, mandating consent and de-identification; for example, JAMA Network journals require written permissions for identifiable persons.[41] Graphs must employ appropriate scales and labels, eschewing 3D effects that distort perceptions, as empirical studies show such visuals can inflate perceived differences by up to 30%.[37]Multimedia elements, such as videos, animations, or audio files, are positioned for online-only publication, with files optimized for web viewing (e.g., MP4 format under 25 MB).[37] Guidelines stress accessibility, including transcripts for audio and captions for videos, alongside permissions for third-party content. These supplements link via the figure legend in print versions, enabling interactive exploration of procedures or simulations without compromising core manuscript brevity.[37] Journals adopting AMA style, like those in the JAMA Network, verify technical quality and relevance, rejecting submissions where multimedia fails to add substantive value over static figures.[43]
Ethical and Professional Standards
Authorship Attribution and Conflicts
The AMA Manual of Style, 11th edition (published 2020), defines authorship as a matter of responsibility and accountability, requiring all listed authors to meet explicit criteria to merit credit for the work.[18] These criteria align with established medical publishing standards, stipulating that authors must make substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data; draft the work or revise it critically for important intellectual content; provide final approval of the version to be published; and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work, ensuring accuracy and integrity of any part.[44] Individuals who do not meet all these thresholds should be acknowledged rather than named as authors, distinguishing between substantive intellectual input and lesser roles such as data collection or administrative support.[45]Authorship order typically reflects the relative contribution levels, with the first author often responsible for primary drafting and the last (senior) author overseeing the project, though journals may specify variations; the manual advises clear agreements among authors prior to submission to preempt disputes.[18] For group or collaborative authorship, such as multicenter trials, the manual permits listing a group name alongside individual authors if the group assumes collective responsibility, but requires designation of a corresponding author or guarantor who verifies the work's validity.[44] Ghost authorship—where substantial contributors are uncredited—and guest or gift authorship—where credit is given without merit—are explicitly discouraged as ethical violations that undermine scientific integrity.[45]Conflicts of interest (COI) encompass financial relationships, such as grants, employment, or stock ownership, as well as nonfinancial influences like personal beliefs or institutional pressures that could biasresearch or reporting; the manual mandates full disclosure by all authors, editors, and reviewers to enable readers to assess potential influences.[18] Disclosures should detail the nature, timing, and role of any relevant interests within the past three years, placed in a dedicated section (e.g., "Conflict of Interest Disclosures") near the end of the manuscript, before references, and may include statements like "No other disclosures were reported" if none exist.[46] Editors decide whether to publish these disclosures, balancing transparency against relevance, while failure to disclose can lead to retraction; the manual emphasizes that undisclosed COI erodes trust in biomedical literature, particularly amid rising scrutiny of industry funding in clinical trials.[18] For peer reviewers, similar disclosures are required to avoid biased assessments.[44]
Data Reporting, Reproducibility, and Transparency
The 11th edition of the AMA Manual of Style, released in 2020, dedicates guidance to data reporting practices that prioritize clarity, completeness, and verifiability in medical and scientific manuscripts, aiming to mitigate risks of misinterpretation or non-replication. Authors are instructed to present data in a manner that allows independent verification, including explicit descriptions of study protocols, statistical methods, and any data exclusions or transformations applied. This approach counters common pitfalls such as selective outcome reporting, which empirical analyses have shown affects up to 30% of randomized trials by omitting null results, thereby inflating effect sizes.[47][48]Reproducibility is addressed through requirements for detailed methodological transparency, such as specifying software versions, random seed values for simulations, and exact analytical pipelines to enable exact replication. The manual advocates for the inclusion of data availability statements, recommending deposition of raw datasets in public repositories like Figshare or Dryad when feasible, particularly for studies involving genomics or clinical trials where proprietary restrictions do not apply. This aligns with broader journal policies enforced by AMA-affiliated publications, which may involve data editors reviewing submissions for empirical integrity prior to peer review. Failure to provide such details can lead to rejection, as reproducibility crises in fields like psychology—where only 36% of studies replicated in a 2015 multisite effort—have underscored the causal link between opaque reporting and eroded scientific trust.[49][50]Transparency extends to mandatory disclosures of data manipulations, such as image adjustments in figures or handling of missing data via imputation techniques, with authors required to justify choices using predefined criteria rather than post-hoc rationales. The manual cautions against p-value dredging or multiple testing without correction (e.g., Bonferroni adjustment), mandating reporting of effect sizes, confidence intervals, and power analyses alongside significance tests to convey practical relevance over mere statistical thresholds. For controversial claims, such as those involving subgroup analyses, it insists on prespecification in protocols registered at platforms like ClinicalTrials.gov to prevent data-driven hypotheses masquerading as confirmatory findings. These provisions reflect a commitment to causal inference grounded in observable evidence, rather than unverified assumptions, and are informed by critiques of institutional practices that historically underemphasized raw data scrutiny.[43][51]
Terminology, Inclusivity, and Sensitive Topics
The AMA Manual of Style, in its 11th edition published in 2020, dedicates section 11.12 to inclusive language, aiming to promote precision, equity, and avoidance of bias in medical writing by recommending terminology that reflects biological realities, social constructs, and empirical data on health outcomes.[17] This guidance distinguishes between descriptive accuracy and potentially stigmatizing phrasing, emphasizing person-first constructions (e.g., "person with epilepsy" rather than "epileptic") to prioritize the individual over the condition, a practice rooted in reducing unintended discrimination while maintaining scientific clarity.[52] The manual's approach evolved from the 9th edition in 1988, which first introduced examples of bias-free terms, reflecting ongoing adaptations to linguistic shifts in biomedical discourse without endorsing unsubstantiated ideological frameworks.[53]On sex and gender, the guidelines specify using "sex" for biological factors such as chromosomes, hormones, and anatomy, and "gender" for psychosocial, cultural, or self-identified aspects, underscoring their non-interchangeability to support reproducible reporting of clinical data.[53] Terms like "opposite sex" are discouraged in favor of "another sex" to avoid implying binary opposition, though the manual prioritizes evidence-based distinctions over expansive interpretations of gender identity.[54] For sexual orientation, neutral descriptors such as "lesbian," "gay," "bisexual," or "transgender" are preferred when relevant, with advice to contextualize usage based on study populations and avoid assumptions about prevalence or etiology without supporting data.[17]Race and ethnicity terms are treated as social constructs useful for analyzing health disparities, with recommendations to capitalize "Black" and "White" for consistency and to report categories as self-identified or per standardized data collection (e.g., US Census categories), while cautioning against conflating them with genetic ancestry absent genomic evidence.[55] The manual advises explicit justification for their inclusion in studies, citing examples like higher cardiovascular risks in certain groups, and warns against overgeneralization that ignores socioeconomic confounders.[56]Disability language favors "person with a disability" over "disabled person," and socioeconomic status avoids pejorative labels like "poor" in favor of precise metrics (e.g., "household income below federal poverty level"), aligning with causal analyses of structural factors in health inequities.[54]For age-related terminology, the guidelines recommend "older adults" or specific ranges (e.g., "adults aged 65 years or older") over vague or infantilizing phrases, particularly in geriatrics research where chronological age correlates with physiological changes.[17] Personal pronouns should reflect reported preferences when known, but the manual stresses accuracy in aggregating data (e.g., in surveys) to prevent distortion of findings.[57] On sensitive topics like mental health or substance use, stigmatizing terms such as "schizophrenic" or "addict" are replaced with "person with schizophrenia" or "person with substance use disorder," supported by evidence that such phrasing correlates with reduced provider bias in clinical encounters, though the manual does not mandate it over factual descriptors in purely diagnostic contexts.[53]These recommendations, while intended to enhance readability and fairness, have drawn scrutiny for potentially prioritizing perceived sensitivities over unadorned empirical reporting; for instance, critics argue that mandating capitalized racial terms may imply inherent group salience beyond data warranting it, as noted in discussions of style guide enforcement.[58] The AMA's framework nonetheless insists on source-verified claims, urging authors to substantiate terminology choices with references to primary studies rather than stylistic fiat alone.[56]
Adoption and Influence
Use in Medical and Scientific Publishing
The AMA Manual of Style functions as a comprehensive authority for manuscript preparation in biomedical publishing, encompassing guidelines on grammar, citation formatting, ethical considerations, and visual presentation to ensure clarity and reproducibility.[59] First published in 1962 and now in its 11th edition (2020), it standardizes practices such as superscript numeric in-text citations followed by a numbered reference list, journal title abbreviations per PubMed conventions, and precise reporting of study designs and statistics.[60] This structure facilitates efficient peer review and indexing in databases like MEDLINE, reducing ambiguity in scientific communication.[27]Adoption is most pronounced among journals affiliated with the American Medical Association (AMA), including JAMA and its specialty counterparts (e.g., JAMA Internal Medicine, JAMA Pediatrics), which mandate AMA style for submissions to maintain uniformity in reporting clinical trials, observational studies, and meta-analyses.[61] Beyond AMA publications, numerous biomedical journals require or recommend AMA conventions for elements like authorship attribution, conflict-of-interest disclosures, and data transparency, aligning with International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) recommendations that AMA has historically influenced.[62] A 2021 analysis of 1,100 high-impact biomedical journals found that 70 (6.5%) explicitly use the current AMA or National Library of Medicine (NLM)/Vancouver style, while 425 (39.2%) employ older versions or variations thereof, underscoring its foundational role despite shifts toward hybrid formats in some outlets.[63]In practice, the manual's guidelines promote rigorous standards, such as specifying P values to three decimal places unless less than .001, mandating confidence intervals alongside point estimates, and advising against redundant statistical tests to avoid overinterpretation of data.[64] For ethical publishing, it emphasizes transparent reporting of funding sources, reproducibility via detailed methods sections, and avoidance of ghost authorship, countering issues like selective outcome reporting observed in retracted studies.[65] These provisions have shaped institutional policies, with medical schools and research consortia training authors in AMA protocols to enhance publication quality amid rising retractions—over 10,000 annually by 2023 per Retraction Watch data—attributable partly to lapses in methodological disclosure.[66] Its influence extends to digital-era adaptations, including DOI prioritization in references and guidelines for multimedia supplements, ensuring compatibility with open-access platforms.[31]
Impact on Education and Professional Practice
The AMA Manual of Style has profoundly shaped scientific writing instruction in medical and health sciences education since its first edition in 1962, serving as a core resource for training students in precise, standardized communication essential for research dissemination. In curricula at institutions such as the University of Washington School of Medicine and the University of Illinois at Chicago, AMA style is emphasized in courses on biomedical writing, with library resources dedicating dedicated guides to its application in theses, journal submissions, and clinical reports.[61][67] This integration ensures learners master numerical citation systems, ethical terminology, and formatting that align with peer-reviewed publishing norms, fostering skills in clarity and reproducibility from early training stages. Professional development courses, including those on platforms like Udemy and specialized AMA mastery programs, further extend this influence by equipping residents and early-career researchers with editing proficiency tailored to medical contexts.[68]In professional practice, adherence to the manual standardizes manuscript preparation across biomedical journals, where instructions for authors frequently mandate its use for grammar, punctuation, references, and ethical reporting, thereby enhancing the reliability of scientific literature.[62] For instance, it underpins guidelines for JAMA Network publications and is referenced as indispensable by editors in medical journalism, promoting consistent terminology that reduces ambiguity in clinical data interpretation and supports evidence-based decision-making.[69] The 11th edition, published in 2020, reinforces this by addressing digital-era challenges like inclusive language without compromising factual precision, influencing professional workflows in peer review and authorship attribution to minimize errors in high-stakes fields like pharmacology and epidemiology.[59] This widespread adoption—evident in its status as the "standard" for medical publishing—facilitates interdisciplinary collaboration by aligning diverse contributors on uniform conventions, ultimately elevating the quality and trustworthiness of disseminated health research.[69]
Comparative Analysis with Other Style Guides
The AMA Manual of Style, tailored for biomedical and scientific publishing, utilizes a superscript numeric citationsystem where references are listed in the order of their first appearance in the text, promoting brevity and flow in dense medical manuscripts. This contrasts with the American Psychological Association (APA) style, prevalent in social and behavioral sciences, which employs an author-date parenthetical format (e.g., Smith, 2020) and organizes references alphabetically, facilitating quick identification of sources by author but potentially disrupting readability in citation-heavy scientific papers.[70][71]APA also mandates page numbers for direct quotes and italicizes book and journal titles consistently, whereas AMA omits page numbers for quotes unless essential and uses sentence case for titles with minimal italics.[70]In comparison to the Chicago Manual of Style, which supports versatile systems including footnotes/endnotes for humanities or an author-date method for sciences, AMA prioritizes a streamlined numeric approach without footnotes to suit journal constraints, emphasizing cross-references and tables integrated post-references rather than embedded extensively.[72] Chicago's broader scope accommodates detailed explanatory notes and varied punctuation (e.g., serial commas optional in some contexts), while AMA enforces the Oxford comma and rigid medical abbreviations, such as those from PubMed for journals, to ensure precision in clinical reporting.[73]Vancouver style, akin to AMA and often derived from it for international medical journals, shares the superscript numeric in-text citations and sequential reference ordering but permits variations in journal title abbreviations and DOI placement, with AMA's 11th edition (2020) providing updated specifics like inclusive DOIs when available.[74] The Council of Science Editors (CSE) style, used in biological and life sciences, offers three options—citation-sequence (mirroring AMA's numeric order), name-year (similar to APA), and citation-name (alphabetical references with sequential numbers)—granting greater adaptability across multidisciplinary fields, though AMA remains more prescriptive for biomedical ethics, such as patient anonymity and conflict disclosures.[73]
AMA's guidance on terminology diverges by mandating precise medical nomenclature (e.g., avoiding eponyms where evidence-based alternatives exist) and addressing reproducibility in data reporting, features less emphasized in generalist guides like Chicago, which prioritize narrative flexibility over empirical rigor.[75] Unlike APA's extensive rules on bias-free language, AMA focuses on patient privacy under standards like HIPAA and evidence-based inclusivity without prescriptive social terminology, reflecting its grounding in clinical accuracy rather than broader psychological framing.[70] These distinctions underscore AMA's optimization for high-stakes scientific dissemination, where citation efficiency and terminological standardization reduce ambiguity in peer-reviewed literature.[71]
Criticisms, Controversies, and Reforms
Debates on Language Evolution and Bias
The 11th edition of the AMA Manual of Style, published in 2020, expanded guidance on inclusive language to address perceived biases in medical and scientific writing, recommending distinctions such as using "sex" for biological attributes and "gender" for psychosocial or cultural factors, while avoiding phrases like "opposite sex."[53][54] This evolution builds on prior editions by incorporating person-first constructions, such as "patient with diabetes" instead of "diabetic patient," to reduce stigmatization, and advising against labeling groups with conditions or socioeconomic statuses, like "the poor" or "minorities."[56][16] Proponents within medical publishing bodies assert that these changes promote equity by aligning terminology with patient-centered communication and mitigating implicit biases that could affect data interpretation or reader perceptions.[76]Debates have arisen over whether such recommendations enhance clarity or impose ideological constraints on scientific expression. Critics argue that the Manual's emphasis on value-neutral and gender-inclusive phrasing, including preferences for singular "they" over gendered pronouns for unidentified individuals, risks diluting biological precision in favor of cultural sensitivities, potentially obscuring sex-based differences in disease prevalence or treatment responses documented in empirical studies.[77][17] For example, guidance aligned with the Manual in AMA's broader health equity resources—such as substituting "vulnerable" with "oppressed" or reframing "low-income people" as victims of structural policies like "banking practices"—has been faulted for injecting unsubstantiated causal narratives into factual reporting, complicating patient understanding and eroding trust in clinical settings.[78][79]These controversies reflect tensions between language evolution driven by social advocacy and the demands of causal realism in medicine, where precise terminology supports reproducible data analysis. While the Manual cites goals of fairness and consistency, skeptics, including physicians wary of institutional pressures, contend that such guidelines often stem from prevailing left-leaning biases in academia and professional associations, leading to overcorrections that prioritize narrative equity over verifiable outcomes, with limited empirical validation of improved health metrics from terminological shifts.[80][81] Debates also encompass race/ethnicityreporting, where the 11th edition urges contextualizing data as social constructs amid inequities, yet critics highlight risks of conflating descriptive statistics with prescriptive ideologies, as evidenced by ongoing disputes over capitalizing racial terms like "Black" and "White."[79][82] Overall, while the Manual's updates aim to adapt to linguistic changes, empirical studies on their net effect remain sparse, fueling arguments that unexamined adoption may hinder rather than advance objective discourse.[78][80]
Challenges in Enforcement and Adaptation
Enforcing the AMA Manual of Style across medical journals and manuscripts often encounters resistance from authors, who frequently submit non-compliant work requiring extensive copyediting. Common errors include incomplete authorship forms, unexplained procedural details, and formatting that complicates editorial review, as documented in analyses of submission pitfalls.[83] These issues burden editorial teams, with journals reporting variability in citation adherence despite standardized guidelines, leading to inconsistencies even among high-impact publications.[63] Such non-compliance stems partly from the manual's comprehensive scope, encompassing ethical, grammatical, and stylistic rules that demand rigorous author training, yet enforcement relies heavily on post-submission corrections rather than preemptive adherence.Adaptation poses further difficulties, particularly in reconciling the manual's print-oriented foundations with digital publishing's demands. The shift to online dissemination has introduced challenges like citing dynamic web content, multimedia integration, and social media propagation of journal material, which the 11th edition addresses but struggles to fully standardize amid rapid technological evolution.[69] For instance, updated guidelines for electronic resources and open access have been incorporated, yet journals face ongoing issues in uniformly applying them to non-traditional formats like podcasts or interactive data visualizations.[84]Global and linguistic adaptations exacerbate enforcement gaps, as international authors interpret nuanced rules—such as terminology for inclusivity—differently, amid community disagreements that hinder consensus.[56] The manual's emphasis on precise, bias-minimizing language encounters resistance when cultural or regional preferences conflict with its recommendations, complicating cross-border compliance without centralized oversight. These factors contribute to uneven adoption, where editorial discretion often fills voids left by the style's interpretive flexibility.
Responses to Digital and Global Changes
The 11th edition of the AMA Manual of Style, published in 2020, introduced substantial revisions to accommodate the shift toward digital dissemination of medical and scientific information, recognizing that online platforms have transformed contentaccessibility and citation practices. Key updates include eliminating the need for publisher locations in references, as digital availability often renders physical sites irrelevant, and standardizing the placement of DOIs and URLs at the end of citations without trailing periods to facilitate direct copying and linking.[4] These changes reflect the causal impact of internet proliferation on publishing workflows, where electronic identifiers enable precise retrieval without geographic dependencies.Expanded reference formats address emerging digital formats, providing explicit guidance for citing social media posts, preprints, mobile applications, podcasts, and online databases. For instance, social media citations now specify elements such as author handles, post content excerpts, timestamps, and platform URLs, with grammatical allowances for platform-specific conventions like contractions or symbols while maintaining formal clarity.[4][85] This responds to the empirical rise in scholarly discourse via platforms like Twitter (now X), where rapid dissemination can influence research uptake but requires verifiable attribution to uphold reproducibility. Additionally, the manual mandates data-sharing statements for clinical trials—aligned with International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) requirements since 2018—and encourages optional sharing for other studies via trusted digital repositories, promoting transparency in an era where raw data access via online supplements or archives is increasingly expected for validation.[4][43]On global changes, the manual adapts to heightened international collaboration in medical research by reinforcing ethical guidelines for human subjects, informed consent, and conflicts of interest that align with multinational standards, such as those from the Declaration of Helsinki and ICMJE. It accommodates diverse author affiliations, including updates for country naming conventions (e.g., specifying "China" in place of ambiguous regional terms), which aids consistency in multi-institutional, cross-border manuscripts.[46][43] While primarily oriented toward U.S.-based publishing norms, these provisions facilitate adaptation for global audiences by supporting citations of non-English sources through transliteration and translation protocols, though the manual notes potential variations in international enforcement due to differing regulatory environments. Single institutional review board (IRB) approvals are endorsed for multisite U.S. studies under the 2017 Common Rule revisions (effective January 21, 2019), with caveats for international sites requiring separate ethical oversight to ensure compliance across jurisdictions.[4] This pragmatic approach acknowledges the logistical challenges of globalization without mandating uniform worldwide standards, prioritizing empirical ethical rigor over harmonization where causal differences in legal frameworks exist.[86]
Recent Developments
Updates to the 11th Edition and Beyond
The 11th edition of the AMA Manual of Style was published on February 3, 2020, representing a comprehensive revision from the 10th edition issued in 2007. This update addressed advancements in digital publishing, with expanded sections on citing electronic resources including podcasts, databases, social media, and apps. Guidance on references now emphasizes DOIs over URLs when available and provides formats for multimedia content such as videos and interactive graphics.[59][87]Ethical and legal considerations received significant expansion, including detailed protocols for authorship attribution, conflict-of-interest disclosures, and handling retractions amid rising concerns over research misconduct. The manual introduced recommendations for patient-centered language, prioritizing terms that emphasize individuals over diagnoses (e.g., "person with epilepsy" rather than "epileptic") to reduce stigma, though these align with broader institutional preferences in medical communication that may reflect prevailing academic norms rather than empirical outcomes on patient impact. Legal updates cover data privacy under regulations like HIPAA and GDPR, reflecting globalized research collaborations.[88][43]Post-publication, the AMA Style Committee implemented targeted online revisions, notably in March 2020 adding nomenclature for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) to align with emerging epidemiological standards. Subsequent updates have included clarifications on inclusive terminology for sex and gender in reporting, such as specifying biological sex where relevant to clinical data, and guidance on artificial intelligence in manuscript preparation, urging disclosure of AI-assisted writing tools to maintain transparency in authorship. These changes are documented on the official updates page and reflect adaptive responses to technological and scientific shifts without a full reprint.[89][89]As of October 2025, no 12th edition has been announced, with the AMA relying on continuous digital amendments to the 11th edition for timeliness. Future adaptations are likely to prioritize verifiable data integrity in AI-generated content and equitable global citation practices, given the manual's role in standardizing evidence-based medical literature amid increasing open-access publishing and preprint proliferation.[88][59]
Future Directions in Style Guidance
As scientific publishing increasingly incorporates artificial intelligence (AI) tools for manuscript preparation, drafting, and data analysis, future iterations of style guidance are likely to emphasize mandatory disclosure of AI usage to maintain transparency and authorship integrity.[90][91] Guidelines may specify protocols for verifying AI-generated content against empirical data, addressing risks of hallucinated references or biased outputs that could undermine causal inferences in biomedical research.[92] This shift responds to empirical evidence of AI's role in accelerating production but also introducing errors, as documented in analyses of over 1,000 AI-assisted papers where undisclosed use led to retractions.[93]Evolving standards for inclusive language will continue to prioritize patient-centered terminology, such as preferring "people with disabilities" over "the disabled," to foster respect without sacrificing precision in reporting biological variables like sex, which remains a fundamental epidemiological category distinct from self-identified gender.[56][53] However, amid institutional pressures for equity-focused phrasing, future guidance may incorporate safeguards against overgeneralization that obscures data-driven distinctions, as critiques highlight how conflating sex and gender in studies can inflate variability in outcomes like drug efficacy, where chromosomal differences yield measurable effects (e.g., 10-20% variance in pharmacokinetics).[77] The AMA's ongoing blog updates, which have addressed such nuances since the 11th edition's 2020 release, suggest a model of iterative, online refinements rather than infrequent print revisions.[8]Digital and global adaptations are poised to standardize multimedia integration, including interactive visualizations for complex datasets like genomic sequences, aligning with open science mandates that have increased preprint usage by 300% since 2020.[94] Multilingual guidelines may expand to accommodate non-English submissions, reflecting a 25% rise in international co-authorships, while enforcing uniform reporting of metrics such as confidence intervals to counter variability in regional practices.[95] These directions prioritize causal clarity over stylistic conformity, ensuring style evolves with evidence rather than ideological trends, as evidenced by regulatory bodies like the FDA advocating for precise, verifiable language in submissions.[96]