An article that is completely contained inside another article. This model assumes that there is always an outside article, and that both the article and the sub-article have their own metadata. The container article will have, at the very least, journal information, issue information, and start and end pages; it may also have a title, author, or other metadata. The contained sub-article will have its own, independent metadata, such as authors or a smaller page range, that it may not share with the article that encloses it. The sub-article metadata may be tagged using the <front-stub> element if all of the journal metadata is identical to that of the outside article; if the <front-stub> element is used, any metadata not specifically tagged is inherited from the outside article.
Conversion Note: “Superarticles” that contain other articles rarely contain much content of their own, perhaps just a title and introductory paragraph.
Conversion Note: This construction should not be used for an article and its response, or for a series of responses, even if the original article to which the responses are replying is elsewhere.
<!ELEMENT sub-article %sub-article-model; >
The following, in order:
<article> <front> <journal-meta> <journal-id journal-id-type="publisher">BR MED J</journal-id> <issn>0959-8138</issn> <publisher> <publisher-name>British Medical Journal</publisher-name> </publisher></journal-meta> <article-meta> <article-id>bmj-4619-a6</article-id> <article-categories> <subj-group> <subject>General Practice</subject> <subject>11</subject> <subject>9</subject> <subject>76</subject> <subject>215</subject> <subject>110</subject> <subject>318</subject> </subj-group> <series-title>Controversy in primary care</series-title> </article-categories> <title-group> <article-title>Should asymptomatic haemochromatosis be treated?</article-title></title-group> <pub-date pub-type="pub"><day>13</day> <month>05</month><year>2000</year></pub-date> <volume>320</volume><issue>7245</issue> <fpage>1314</fpage> <lpage>1317</lpage> <permissions> <copyright-statement>Copyright © 2000, British Medical Journal</copyright-statement> </permissions> </article-meta> </front> <body><p>Genetic testing ...</p> </body> <sub-article article-type="research-article"> <front> <journal-meta> <journal-id journal-id-type="publisher">BR MED J</journal-id> <issn>0959-8138</issn> <publisher> <publisher-name>British Medical Journal</publisher-name> </publisher> </journal-meta> <article-meta> <title-group> <article-title>Treatment can be onerous for patient and doctor</article-title></title-group> <contrib-group> <contrib contrib-type="author"><name> <surname>Seamark</surname> <given-names>Clare J</given-names></name> <role>general practitioner</role> <xref ref-type="aff"><sup><italic>a</italic></sup></xref> </contrib> <contrib contrib-type="author"> <name><surname>Hutchinson</surname> <given-names>Margaret</given-names></name> <role>retired headmistress</role> </contrib> </contrib-group> <aff><sup><italic>a</italic></sup>Honiton Group Practice, Honiton, Devon EX14 2NY</aff> <author-notes> <fn><p>Correspondence to: C Seamark <email>daseamark@msn.com</email></p></fn> <fn><p>Competing interests: None declared.</p></fn> </author-notes> <history> <date date-type="accepted"> <day>07</day><month>02</month> <year>2000</year></date> </history> <permissions> <copyright-statement>Copyright © 2000, British Medical Journal</copyright-statement> </permissions> </article-meta> </front> <body> <p>The development of genetic testing for disease has raised the problem of whether to test asymptomatic individuals. ...</p> ... </body> <back> <ack> <p>We thank MH's family for their willingness to be involved in genetic testing ...</p> </ack> <ref-list> ... </ref-list> </back> </sub-article> <sub-article article-type="research-article">...</sub-article> <sub-article article-type="research-article">...</sub-article> </article>
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