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Introduction

Questions about the NIH Style Guide? Please email odocplinquiries@od.nih.gov.

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The NIH Style Guide is intended for use in writing web content, fact sheets, brochures, newsletters, and other promotional materials. NIH follows the for news releases. For items not covered by this guide, please refer to and AP. Whenever we diverge from HHS or AP’s guidance, it is explicitly stated in the style guide.

As language evolves, so will this style guide to reflect current best practices.

Open and read the links to the AP Stylebook found in many entries; the AP guidance for that topic is primary and anything included here is in addition to AP or providing additional context. The AP Stylebook is now available to all NIH staff when on the NIH network or VPN through a , thanks to the .

Note that this style guide is not intended for scientific publications, which typically follow the American Medical Association, the National Library of Medicine, and other styles.

Other resources

  • Plain Language: The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Public Law 111-274) aims to improve clarity and simplicity in government communication. The law requires federal agencies to use clear language that the public can understand and use.
  • Science, Health, and the Public Trust webpage: Provides guidelines on communicating science and health research to the public. Be sure to reference the Understanding Clinical Studies page when writing about studies and clinical trials.
  • : Provides best practices for communications professionals who translate and write Spanish health, science, or clinical research materials.
  • : Provides guidance for controlled correspondence.
  • and : Provides information on the National Library of Medicine (NLM) style for journal abbreviations, date formats, page numbers, and authors, as well as other styles.
    • PubMed is a database hosted by NLM that contains more than 34 million biomedical literature citations and abstracts.
    • PubMed Central (PMC) is a digital archive hosted by NLM containing millions of freely accessible, full-text biomedical and life sciences journal articles.
    • These resources are scientific literature databases offered to the public by NLM. NLM is not a publisher, but rather collects, indexes, and archives scientific literature published by other organizations. The presence of any article, book, or document in these databases does not imply an endorsement of, or concurrence with, the contents by NLM, NIH, or the U.S. Federal Government.
  • : Provides guidance for health communicators to ensure their communication products and strategies adapt to the specific cultural, linguistic, environmental, and historical situation of each population or audience of focus.
  • : Provides guidance for developers, designers, and content creators to ensure that federal websites and digital products meet the , part of Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.