Cite
Preferences for interventions designed to increase cervical screening uptake in non‐attending young women: How findings from a discrete choice experiment compare with observed behaviours in a trial.
MLA
Campbell, Helen E., et al. “Preferences for Interventions Designed to Increase Cervical Screening Uptake in Non‐attending Young Women: How Findings from a Discrete Choice Experiment Compare with Observed Behaviours in a Trial.” Health Expectations, vol. 23, no. 1, Feb. 2020, pp. 202–11. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12992.
APA
Campbell, H. E., Gray, A. M., Watson, J., Jackson, C., Moseley, C., Cruickshank, M. E., Kitchener, H. C., & Rivero, A. O. (2020). Preferences for interventions designed to increase cervical screening uptake in non‐attending young women: How findings from a discrete choice experiment compare with observed behaviours in a trial. Health Expectations, 23(1), 202–211. https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12992
Chicago
Campbell, Helen E., Alastair M. Gray, Judith Watson, Cath Jackson, Carly Moseley, Margaret E. Cruickshank, Henry C. Kitchener, and Arias, Oliver Rivero. 2020. “Preferences for Interventions Designed to Increase Cervical Screening Uptake in Non‐attending Young Women: How Findings from a Discrete Choice Experiment Compare with Observed Behaviours in a Trial.” Health Expectations 23 (1): 202–11. doi:10.1111/hex.12992.