I agree that this site is using cookies. You can find further informations
here
.
X
Login
Merkliste (
0
)
Home
About us
Home About us
Our history
Profile
Press & public relations
Friends
The library in figures
Exhibitions
Projects
Training, internships, careers
Films
Services & Information
Home Services & Information
Lending and interlibrary loans
Returns and renewals
Training and library tours
My Account
Library cards
New to the library?
Download Information
Opening hours
Learning spaces
PC, WLAN, copy, scan and print
Catalogs and collections
Home Catalogs and Collections
Rare books and manuscripts
Digital collections
Subject Areas
Our sites
Home Our sites
Central Library
Law Library (Juridicum)
BB Business and Economics (BB11)
BB Physics and Electrical Engineering
TB Engineering and Social Sciences
TB Economics and Nautical Sciences
TB Music
TB Art & Design
TB Bremerhaven
Contact the library
Home Contact the library
Staff Directory
Open access & publishing
Home Open access & publishing
Reference management: Citavi & RefWorks
Publishing documents
Open Access in Bremen
zur Desktop-Version
Toggle navigation
Merkliste
1 Ergebnisse
1
How a few poorly designed COVID-19 studies may have contrib..:
Alves, Charles Phiilipe de Lucena
;
Barreto Segundo, João de Deus
;
da Costa, Gabriel Gonçalves
...
BMJ Open Science. 5 (2021) 1 - p. , 2021
Link:
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjos-2021-100202
RT Journal T1
How a few poorly designed COVID-19 studies may have contributed to misinformation in Brazil: the case for evidence-based communication of science
UL https://suche.suub.uni-bremen.de/peid=cr-10.1136_bmjos-2021-100202&Exemplar=1&LAN=DE A1 Alves, Charles Phiilipe de Lucena A1 Barreto Segundo, João de Deus A1 da Costa, Gabriel Gonçalves A1 Pereira-Cenci, Tatiana A1 Lima, Kenio Costa A1 Demarco, Flávio Fernando A1 Crochemore-Silva, Inácio PB Portico YR 2021 SN 2398-8703 JF BMJ Open Science VO 5 IS 1 LK http://dx.doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjos-2021-100202 DO https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjos-2021-100202 SF ELIB - SuUB Bremen
Export
RefWorks (nur Desktop-Version!)
Flow
(Zuerst in
Flow
einloggen, dann importieren)