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APA vs JAMA: Key Differences

APA and JAMA are two of the most widely used citation styles in academia, but they differ in important ways. APA (American Psychological Association 7th Edition) the most widely used citation style in the social sciences. JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) the citation style for JAMA and the JAMA Network journals. Understanding the differences will help you choose the right format for your paper.

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureAPAJAMA
Citation SystemAuthor-DateNumbered
In-Text Format(Author, Year)Superscript numbers¹
Reference List NameReference ListReferences
Edition7th editioncurrent
Common FieldsPsychology, Education, Social Sciences, Nursing, BusinessMedicine, Clinical Research, Public Health

When to Use APA

APA (American Psychological Association 7th Edition) uses a parenthetical author-date citation system with (Author, Year) in-text citations and a Reference List at the end of the paper. It is most commonly used in Psychology, Education, Social Sciences, and related fields.

When to Use JAMA

JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) uses a numbered citation system with Superscript numbers¹ in-text citations and a References at the end of the paper. It is most commonly used in Medicine, Clinical Research, Public Health.

See the Difference in Action

Try our interactive comparison tool to compare APA and JAMA citations side by side using your own sources.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between APA and JAMA?
APA and JAMA differ in their in-text citation format, reference list structure, and the academic disciplines that use them. APA uses (Author, Year) in-text citations with a Reference List, while JAMA uses Superscript numbers¹ with a References.
Which is better, APA or JAMA?
Neither APA nor JAMA is inherently better. The right choice depends on your academic discipline, your instructor's requirements, or the journal you are submitting to. Check your assignment guidelines or target publication to determine which style to use.
Can I switch between APA and JAMA?
Yes, you can switch between APA and JAMA using CitationEasy's free citation generator. Simply select the desired style and your citations will be reformatted automatically. However, you should only use one style per paper unless your instructor says otherwise.