Jesitus, John. "Mind+Body Medicine: Putting Mind Over Health Matters." Managed Healthcare Executive (April 2002): 33-6.
Golden, Jane. "Qigong and Tai Chi as Energy Medicine." Share Guide (November-December 2001): 37.
Sources of information: primary-information you have gathered yourself secondary-information gathered by other people (such as government statistics) possable sources of information: journal atricals, web pages, books, interviews
Belden, Heidi. "Debate Continues Over Best Drug for Hypertension." Drug Topics (April 21, 2003): 32. Mechcatie, Elizabeth. "Genetics Will Guide Prescribing for Hypertension: Genotype Predicts Response to Drug." Internal Medicine News (July 1, 2003)
Inside Ayurveda: An Independent Journal of Ayurvedic Health Care. P.O. Box 3021, Quincy, CA 95971. http://www.insideayurveda.com.
Katerndahl, David A. "Panic Attacks and Panic Disorder." Journal of Family Practice 43 (September 1996): 275-283.
Kreydiyyeh, S. I., and J. Usta. "Diuretic Effect and Mechanism of Action of Parsley." Journal of Ethnopharmacology 79 (March 2002): 353-357.
Thanker, H.K., and M.H. Snow. "HIV Viral Suppression in the Era of Antiretroviral Therapy." Postgraduate Medical Journal (January 2003): 36.
Secondary sources are materials that interpret, analyze, or comment on primary sources. These can include textbooks, journal articles, and analyses of historical events or data. Secondary sources provide a perspective or evaluation of primary sources rather than directly presenting the original information.
Medicine can be derived from plant sources (herbal medicine), animal sources (such as insulin from pigs), mineral sources (like iron supplements), synthetic sources (laboratory-produced drugs), and microbial sources (such as antibiotics produced by fungi or bacteria).
The cover page for a journal submission should include the title of the paper, the names and affiliations of all authors, contact information for the corresponding author, any acknowledgments or funding sources, and a word count for the manuscript.
Viljoen, M., et al. "Psychoneuroimmunology: From Philosophy, Intuition, and Folklore to a Recognized Science. South African Journal of Science (July/August 2003): 332-6.
Farley, Dixie. "Help for Cuts, Scrapes and Burns." FDA Consumer May 1996: 12.