I'm sorry but I will have to respectfully disagree. APA does include footnotes and endnotes. I again refer you to style guides. Since in the pharmaceutical industry, specifically clinical research and medical affairs department, we publish articles and papers on a quarterly basis that are written in APA style.
This is a quick reference I found online.
http://www.sourceaid.com/reference/pdf/c...-guide.pdf
Pg 9
Footnotes
General Guidelines
1. Footnotes are used to provide information that is not essential to the thesis of the text.
2. Footnotes are used sparingly.
3. Statements, for which there is information in the footnotes, are superscripted with a sequential number that corresponds with the relevant footnote.
4. The footnotes page is placed at the end of the text preceding the Reference List page.
Pg 10
Endnotes
In most styles, the only difference between footnotes and endnotes is their location within the text. Traditionally, endnotes are located on a separate page and footnotes are located at the bottom of the page on which their associated statements appear. APA style is an exception to these endnote/footnote distinctions. APA footnotes replace endnotes, but the footnotes appear in the traditional location of endnotes (on a separate page preceding the reference list).
This is a quick reference I found online.
http://www.sourceaid.com/reference/pdf/c...-guide.pdf
Pg 9
Footnotes
General Guidelines
1. Footnotes are used to provide information that is not essential to the thesis of the text.
2. Footnotes are used sparingly.
3. Statements, for which there is information in the footnotes, are superscripted with a sequential number that corresponds with the relevant footnote.
4. The footnotes page is placed at the end of the text preceding the Reference List page.
Pg 10
Endnotes
In most styles, the only difference between footnotes and endnotes is their location within the text. Traditionally, endnotes are located on a separate page and footnotes are located at the bottom of the page on which their associated statements appear. APA style is an exception to these endnote/footnote distinctions. APA footnotes replace endnotes, but the footnotes appear in the traditional location of endnotes (on a separate page preceding the reference list).
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