Order Number |
0674534346 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
Two ways you must cite sources in MLA:
…Dogs can also help people cope with stress during crisis situations such as floods, earthquakes, and shootings. According to Jan Shubert, LCSW, animals have been used by emergency workers and therapists off and on since the 1800s, and this practice has increasingly been seen as an essential component of disaster response (75)
…Therapy dogs can actually provide real, measureable relief from physical pain and stress. In a study conducted in 2013, researchers provided short visits with therapy dogs for a group of fibromyalgia patients visiting a pain clinic. They report that “significant improvements were reported for pain, mood, and other measures of distress among patients after the therapy dog visit, but not the waiting room control” (Marcus et. al 43).
Works Cited
Marcus, Dawn A., et al. “Impact Of Animal-Assisted Therapy For Outpatients With Fibromyalgia.” Pain Medicine 14.1 (2013): 43-51. Academic Search Complete. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.
Shubert, Jan. “Therapy Dogs And Stress Management Assistance During Disasters.” U.S. Army Medical Department Journal (2012): 74-78. Academic Search Complete. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.
– composed by Gabe Winer
composed by Gabe Winer
Two ways you must cite sources in MLA:
1.
In the
Works Cited
list on a separate page at the end of your essay
: this is where you
put the whole citation with all the information about it
2.
In the sentence
where you quote or paraphrase it: this is called “
in
–
text citation
”
because it is in your text,
or “
parenthetical citation
”
because you can put the author
and/or page # in parentheses): put the author’s last name (or if there isn’t an author
named, whatever comes first in the Works Cited entry) and page #
Works Cited
Marcus
, Dawn A., et al. “Impact Of Animal
–
Assisted Therapy For Outpatients With Fibromyalgia.”
Pain
Medicine
14.1 (2013): 43
–
51.
Academic Search Complete
. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.
Shubert
, Jan. “Therapy Dogs And Stress Management
Assistance During Disasters.”
U.S. Army Medical
Department Journal
(2012): 74
–
78.
Academic Search Complete
. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.
…Dogs can also help people cope with stress during crisis situations such as floods, earthquakes,
and shootings. According to Jan
Shubert
, LCSW, animals have been used by emergency workers and
therapists off and on since the 1800s, and this practice h
as increasingly been seen as an essential
component of disaster response (75)
…Therapy dogs can actually provide real, measureable relief from physical pain and stress.
In a
study conducted in 2013, researchers provided short visits with therapy dogs for a
group of fibromyalgia
patients visiting a pain clinic. They report that “significant improvements were reported for pain, mood,
and other measures of distress among patients after the therapy dog visit, but not the waiting room
control” (
Marcus
.
– composed by Gabe Winer
Two ways you must cite sources in MLA:
put the whole citation with all the information about it
because it is in your text, or “parenthetical citation” because you can put the author
and/or page # in parentheses): put the author’s last name (or if there isn’t an author
named, whatever comes first in the Works Cited entry) and page #
Works Cited
Marcus, Dawn A., et al. “Impact Of Animal-Assisted Therapy For Outpatients With Fibromyalgia.” Pain
Medicine 14.1 (2013): 43-51. Academic Search Complete. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.
Shubert, Jan. “Therapy Dogs And Stress Management Assistance During Disasters.” U.S. Army Medical
Department Journal (2012): 74-78. Academic Search Complete. Web. 21 Feb. 2014.
…Dogs can also help people cope with stress during crisis situations such as floods, earthquakes,
and shootings. According to Jan Shubert, LCSW, animals have been used by emergency workers and
therapists off and on since the 1800s, and this practice has increasingly been seen as an essential
component of disaster response (75)
…Therapy dogs can actually provide real, measureable relief from physical pain and stress. In a
study conducted in 2013, researchers provided short visits with therapy dogs for a group of fibromyalgia
patients visiting a pain clinic. They report that “significant improvements were reported for pain, mood,
and other measures of distress among patients after the therapy dog visit, but not the waiting room
control” (Marcus et. al 43).