Burghardt, J., Tibubos, A.N., Otten, D., Brähler, E., Binder, H., Grabe, H.J., Kruse, J., Ladwig, K.-H., Schomerus, G., Wild, P. und Beutel, M. (2020) A multi-cohort consortium for GEnder-Sensitive Analyses of mental health trajectories and implications for prevention (GESA) in the general population in Germany [cd]. Freiburg: Universität. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034220.
Chicago Manual of Style 17th edition (full note)Burghardt, Juliane, Ana Nanette Tibubos, Danielle Otten, Elmar Brähler, Harald Binder, Hans Jörgen Grabe, Johannes Kruse, Karl-Heinz Ladwig, Georg Schomerus, Philipp Wild, und Manfred Beutel. A multi-cohort consortium for GEnder-Sensitive Analyses of mental health trajectories and implications for prevention (GESA) in the general population in Germany. Cd. Freiburg: Universität, [2020?], Freiburg: Universität, [2020?]. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034220.
American Psychological Association 7th editionBurghardt, J., Tibubos, A. N., Otten, D., Brähler, E., Binder, H., Grabe, H. J., Kruse, J., Ladwig, K.-H., Schomerus, G., Wild, P., & Beutel, M. (ca. 2020). A multi-cohort consortium for GEnder-Sensitive Analyses of mental health trajectories and implications for prevention (GESA) in the general population in Germany [Cd]. Universität. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034220
Modern Language Association 9th editionBurghardt, J., A. N. Tibubos, D. Otten, E. Brähler, H. Binder, H. J. Grabe, J. Kruse, K.-H. Ladwig, G. Schomerus, P. Wild, und M. Beutel. A multi-cohort consortium for GEnder-Sensitive Analyses of mental health trajectories and implications for prevention (GESA) in the general population in Germany. cd, Universität, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034220.
ISO-690 (author-date, Deutsch)BURGHARDT, Juliane, Ana Nanette TIBUBOS, Danielle OTTEN, Elmar BRÄHLER, Harald BINDER, Hans Jörgen GRABE, Johannes KRUSE, Karl-Heinz LADWIG, Georg SCHOMERUS, Philipp WILD und Manfred BEUTEL, 2020. A multi-cohort consortium for GEnder-Sensitive Analyses of mental health trajectories and implications for prevention (GESA) in the general population in Germany. Freiburg: Universität