Williamson, R. A., Kolstad, A. T., Nadeau, L, Goulet, C, Hagel, B & Emery, C. A. (2021). Does increasing the severity of penalties assessed in association with the 'zero tolerance for head contact' policy translate to a reduction in head impact rates in youth ice hockey? British Journal of Sports Medicine, 55 (S1), A86.1-A86. Zugriff am 16.03.2022 unter https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2021-IOC.203
APA (7th ed.) CitationWilliamson, R. A., Kolstad, A. T., Nadeau, L., Goulet, C., Hagel, B., & Emery, C. A. (2021). Does increasing the severity of penalties assessed in association with the 'zero tolerance for head contact' policy translate to a reduction in head impact rates in youth ice hockey? British Journal of Sports Medicine, 55(S1), A86.1-A86.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationWilliamson, R. A., A. T. Kolstad, L. Nadeau, C. Goulet, B. Hagel, and C. A. Emery. "Does Increasing the Severity of Penalties Assessed in Association with the 'Zero Tolerance for Head Contact' Policy Translate to a Reduction in Head Impact Rates in Youth Ice Hockey?" British Journal of Sports Medicine 55, no. S1 (2021): A86.1-A86.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationWilliamson, R. A., et al. "Does Increasing the Severity of Penalties Assessed in Association with the 'Zero Tolerance for Head Contact' Policy Translate to a Reduction in Head Impact Rates in Youth Ice Hockey?" British Journal of Sports Medicine, vol. 55, no. S1, 2021, pp. A86.1-A86.