Cite
(236) African Americans are at increased risk of developing chronic pain and itch at the site of tissue autograft following major thermal burn injury
MLA
Bruce A. Cairns, et al. “(236) African Americans Are at Increased Risk of Developing Chronic Pain and Itch at the Site of Tissue Autograft Following Major Thermal Burn Injury.” The Journal of Pain, vol. 15, Apr. 2014, p. S35. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2014.01.143.
APA
Bruce A. Cairns, Jennifer S. Smith, James Hwang, Sean E. McLean, A. Bermudez, L. Ballina, D. Smith, Ankit Patel, Sara R. Jones, J. Hu, T. Tran, R. Karlnoski, & A. Liu. (2014). (236) African Americans are at increased risk of developing chronic pain and itch at the site of tissue autograft following major thermal burn injury. The Journal of Pain, 15, S35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpain.2014.01.143
Chicago
Bruce A. Cairns, Jennifer S. Smith, James Hwang, Sean E. McLean, A. Bermudez, L. Ballina, D. Smith, et al. 2014. “(236) African Americans Are at Increased Risk of Developing Chronic Pain and Itch at the Site of Tissue Autograft Following Major Thermal Burn Injury.” The Journal of Pain 15 (April): S35. doi:10.1016/j.jpain.2014.01.143.