Article: You also need to create a citation to use in the text. In this case, you just need the author and the date, but you'll start with the author.  You can either use the name in the sentence and open a parenthesis for the date or place both of them in parenthesis, separated by a semicolon to indicate they are 2 separate items.  If you're incorporating the organization name into the sentence, it will look like this so far:  According to the World Health Organization (WHO; The abbreviation in brackets tells the reader you'll use the abbreviation WHO throughout the rest of the article.   If you want to cite your source at the end of the sentence, it will look like this so far: According to a recent report, health objectives are falling (World Health Organization [WHO], Once you've told the reader you'll use the abbreviation WHO by adding it after the name, you must use it in later citations. APA rules require that you continue to use an abbreviation after you introduce it. Put in place of the full name. You'll just use "WHO":  According to the WHO ( According to the report, the main cause is a rise in infectious disease (WHO, The date is also used in an in-text citation to help the reader determine which report you're referring to. Place it after the organization's name in parenthesis. You can use "n.d." if there isn't a date.  Your first citation within a sentence will look like this: According to the World Health Organization (WHO; 2011),  Your first citation at the end of a sentence will look like this: According to a recent report, health objectives are falling (World Health Organization [WHO], 2011).  In subsequent entries, it will look like this for a citation within a sentence: According to the WHO (2011),  Subsequent citations that come at the end of a sentence will look like this: According to the report, the main cause is a rise in infectious disease (WHO, 2011). When using a quotation, you'll need to add a page or paragraph number after the quotation. APA also encourages you to use a page or paragraph number when you paraphrase, but it's not required. Use a page number if you can find one and a paragraph number if you can't. Place the page number in parenthesis after the last quotation mark but before the period.  For instance, you'd add the page number like this: According to WHO (2011), "infectious disease is a widespread problem" (p. 63).  If your whole citation comes after the quote, you can use this method: The report stated the following: "Infectious disease is a widespread problem" (WHO, 2011, p. 63).  To cite a paragraph, write it this way: According to WHO (2011), "infectious disease is a widespread problem" (para. 30).

What is a summary?
Begin with the author. Abbreviate WHO when you mention it again. Add the date after the author's name. Place a page number or paragraph number at the end.