Skip to Main Content

Lectures

  Format Example
Recorded lectures/ webinars

#. Presenter AA, Presenter BB. Title of webinar. Organization/institution name webinar. Date of webinar publication Month Day, Year. Accessed Month Day, Year. URL

1. Dunfield L, Sandhu R, Lyster J. Evidence-to-action: remote monitoring: clinical considerations and the patient perspective. CADTH webinar. May 10, 2022. Accessed July 27, 2022. https://youtu.be/ojih7-OvO5E
Lectures, keynote addresses, or other speaking presentations

#. Presenter AA, Presenter BB. Title of lecture or presentation. Lecture/keynote presented at: Name of meeting/course/event; Date of lecture/presentation Month DD-DD, Year; City, Province/State.

1. Currant K. Considering the availability of cardiac pacemakers in northern populations in Canada. Lecture presented at: University of Regina Graduate Symposium; February 9, 2019; Regina, SK.

General Rules 

  • How to format in-text citations in your document.
  • Author/editor names: Last name + First name initial + Middle name initial (if available). e.g., Armand Peter Smith = Smith AP.
  • The names of all authors and editors should be given unless there are more than 6 (7 or more), in which case the names of the first 3 authors are used, followed by “et al”). e.g., Smith TP, Brown A, McLane E, et al.
  • No authors, organization, or editors listed? Contact library@saskhealthauthority.ca to ask a librarian.
  • Titles: Follow examples when using upper- and lowercase initials and italics. Do not use quotation marks for titles (e.g., "Title").
  • Subtitles: Use the colon (i.e., : ) to separate the title from the subtitle. e.g., Rural Healthcare: A Definitive Guide.
  • Dates: Spell out the full month name for 'Accessed' date. e.g., June, not Jun or 06. 
  • Proper nouns: Always capitalize the first initial of country/city, person, clinical tool, organization, and/or association names.