Place is defined as the city where the journal was published.
Follow US and Canadian cities with the two-letter abbreviation for the state or province (see Appendix E) to avoid confusion when citing lesser known cities or when cities in different locations have same name, such as Palm Springs (CA) and Palm Springs (FL).
Follow cities in other countries with the name of the country, either written out or as the two-letter ISO country code (see Appendix D), when citing lesser known cities or when cities in different locations have the same name, such as Cambridge (MA) and Cambridge (England).
End place information with a colon.
Según:
Citing Medicine: The NLM Style Guide for Authors, Editors, and Publishers [Internet]. 2nd edition. Chapter 1: Journals
Related:
General Rules for Place of Publication (required) for Entire Journal Titles Vancouver Style
Specific Rules #1 for Place of Publication (required) for Entire Journal Titles Vancouver Style: Non-US cities
Specific Rules #2 for Place of Publication (required) for Entire Journal Titles Vancouver Style: Multiple places of publication
Specific Rules #3 for Place of Publication (required) for Entire Journal Titles Vancouver Style: No place of publication can be found
Examples for Place of Publication (required) for Entire Journal Titles Vancouver Style
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