@article{6986,
  abstract     = {Background: Artificial intelligence–based skin cancer screening apps (AISCSAs) offer diagnostic potential but face limited adoption. App store cues, such as ratings, may influence acceptance; yet, little is known about how users cognitively process app store information in high-stakes health contexts. To address this gap, eye-tracking was used to measure visual attention while participants evaluated a mock AISCSA app store listing.

Objective: This study aimed to test whether a single negative rating captures visual attention and whether an extended technology acceptance model (TAM) can predict behavioral intention to use (BI) AISCSAs.

Methods: Participants (N=76) evaluated a mock app store listing for an AISCSA under positive (n=42) or negative (n=34) rating conditions while their eye movements were recorded. Analyses combined fixation durations in defined areas of interest (AOIs) with self-reported measures of perceived usefulness (PU), perceived ease of use (PEOU), trust, BI, willingness to pay, and the self-rated importance of app attributes.

Results: Normalized fixation durations (seconds per square pixel) revealed the highest attention to the description (0.166 s/px2), followed by the reviews (0.11 s/px2) and the ratings (0.04 s/px2), while the price and the data protection received the least attention. Of the 5 self-rated app attributes, only reviews correlated positively with fixation durations on the reviews-AOI (r=0.28; P=.01). Rating valence had no significant effect on gaze patterns, PU, PEOU, trust, BI, or willingness to pay (all Ps>.05). However, PEOU (P=.001), PU (P<.001), and trust (P<.001) were significantly correlated with BI.

Conclusions: Although the expected attentional capture effect of the negative rating was not observed, the weak or nonexistent associations between fixation durations on the AOIs and the self-rated importance of app attributes suggest that eye-tracking captures aspects of information processing that are not directly reflected in self-reported evaluations. These findings indicate that eye-tracking provides a more direct approximation of actual user behavior by revealing implicit attentional processes beyond what is captured by questionnaires. While the technology acceptance model constructs and trust predicted BI, rating valence alone did not affect acceptance or gaze behavior. In high-stakes health contexts, textual information may outweigh rating valence in driving adoption. Future research should explore conditions under which rating valence matters, including more extreme rating contrasts, variations in accompanying review texts, and the influence of individual differences such as preexisting attitudes toward artificial intelligence and levels of artificial intelligence literacy.},
  author       = {Jagemann, Inga and Hegner, Sabrina and Hirschfeld, Gerrit},
  issn         = {2292-9495},
  journal      = {JMIR Human Factors},
  pages        = {e93489--e93489},
  publisher    = {JMIR Publications Inc.},
  title        = {{The Role of Rating Valence in AI Skin Cancer App Acceptance: Eye-Tracking and Questionnaire Study}},
  doi          = {10.2196/93489},
  volume       = {13},
  year         = {2026},
}

@inproceedings{6823,
  author       = {Lammert, Maike and Teschke, Karin and Bakker, Pia and Bernloehr, Annette},
  booktitle    = {Hebapäd; 3. Konferenz zur pädagogischen Arbeit  im Hebammenstudium; Abstractband 03. Mai 2026},
  keywords     = {Pädagogik, Hebammenwissenschaft, Konzeption, Simulationsbasierte Trainings, Beckenendlage, Vierfüßlerstand, HSBI-All4s, Optimierung Geburtssimulator},
  location     = {Leipzig},
  title        = {{Maßgeschneiderte Lösungen für das Skills-Training: Optimierungsoptionen für den  „PROMPT Flex Geburtssimulator“ und das vaginale Untersuchungsmodul}},
  doi          = {10.57720/6823},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6936,
  abstract     = {The data presented here derives from the Sustainable Working Conditions in Academia survey (STAIRCASE) on researcher mental health. The survey addresses the ongoing mental health crisis in academia by providing comprehensive, multilevel data on researcher well-being and its structural determinants. We employed a cross-sectional between-participant study design to collect data from 4,296 researchers between September 15, 2023, and August 26, 2024. The sample, which primarily includes researchers based in European countries, has a mean age of 38.1 years (SD = 10.7) and consists of 63.7% female participants. Participants provided data on key mental health outcomes – including depression, anxiety, stress, burnout, and well-being – alongside detailed assessments of working conditions, leadership behavior, and organizational characteristics. The dataset facilitates a holistic, multilevel investigation of academic mental health beyond individual risk factors by including the individual, leadership, institutional, and national context. By enabling analyses across hierarchical levels this dataset provides the necessary evidence to identify systemic drivers of mental (ill) health and inform the development of effective, system-wide strategies for meaningful change in academic work environments.},
  author       = {Lasser, Jana and Mol, Stefan T. and Čontala, Alja and Slavec, Ana and de Swarte, Andreja Zulim and Khachatryan, Anna and Eleuteri, Anna Maria and Haque, Anupoma and Jansone, Baiba and Vrenozi, Blerina and Cahill, Brian and Trenado, Carlos and Schwieren, Christiane and Iacob, Claudia Iuliana and Tejada-Gallardo, Claudia and Mairean, Cornelia and McCashin, Darragh and Chery, Deborah and Özel, Dilara and Stephen, Dimity and Mijakoski, Dragan and Ronda, Elena and Ricci, Eleonora and Ibrahimi, Eliana and Vita, Emese and Kamberi, Fatjona and Benavides, Fernando G. and Gonçalves, Francisco Valente and Kismihók, Gábor and Manich, Gemma Pascual and Esnaola, Igor and Portoghese, Igor and van der Weijden, Inge and Canu, Irina Guseva and Mehmeti, Irsida and Petrovic, Ivana B. and Šindelář, Jakub and Ferreira, João Miguel Alves and Gabrani, Jonila and Kovács, Karolina Eszter and Pöllänen, Katri and Geles, Konstantinos and Elkheir, Lamis Yahia Mohamed and Cudris-Torres, Lorena and Løvseth, Lise T. and Ioannidou, Louiza and Popovic, Luksa and Aljunaidy, Mais M. and Saboya, Maria Fatjó and Christensen, Marit and Santos, Marlene and Miklikowska, Marta and Paoli, Mateja Erce and Schroijen, Mathias and Fusi, Mathieu and Sundukova, Mayya and Kurtoğlu, Mete and Vukelić, Milica and Anghelache, Mirela Adriana and Adi, Mohamad Nadim and Barkçin, Mümine and Rocha, Nuno Barbosa and Pranjic, Nurka and Bogolyubova, Olga and Moreira, Paulo Alexandre Soares and Moreira, Paulo and Saugmann, Pil Maria and Tuval-Mashiach, Rivka and Mendes, Rui Amaral and Osmanovic, Sabina and Ozdede, Sinem and Lackner, Simone and Gauttier, Stéphanie and Rusu, Szidónia and Lagouri, Theodota and Yüce-Selvi, Ümran and Ziemiańczyk, Urszula and Dhamo, Xhilda},
  issn         = {2050-9863},
  journal      = {Journal of Open Psychology Data},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Ubiquity Press, Ltd.},
  title        = {{Data from the Researcher Mental Health Observatory STAIRCASE Survey}},
  doi          = {10.5334/jopd.136},
  volume       = {14},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6957,
  author       = {Amorin, Alvaro Paredes and Python, Andre and Weisser, Christoph},
  journal      = {Preprint},
  publisher    = {Arxiv},
  title        = {{Not All News Is Equal: Topic- and Event-Conditional Sentiment From Finetuned LLMs for Aluminum Price Forecasting}},
  doi          = {10.48550/arXiv.2603.09085},
  year         = {2026},
}

@inproceedings{6898,
  abstract     = {The labeling process for supervised learning is costly and time-consuming, and is often impractical to scale due to real-world constraints. Active learning (AL) addresses this challenge by strategically selecting representative and informative data points to reduce labeling efforts. This paper focuses on an AL scenario in which only a very limited number of labels can be acquired. We propose an algorithm operating in two phases: (1) an exploration phase that prioritizes representative and diverse data points using density-driven criteria, and (2) an exploitation phase that combines predictive uncertainty with density weighting to select informative samples from densely populated regions. This enhances both representativeness and informativeness. Our results demonstrate significant improvements in model quality compared to other algorithms typically employed for this scenario, across various scenarios involving imbalanced data in classification tasks and skewness in regression tasks. Through this work, we aim to provide a new algorithm for this scenario and investigate general principles for AL. While most AL studies focus on either classification or regression, our work applies the algorithms to both. Therefore, we can analyze the differences between classification and regression problems and their effects on AL strategies. Furthermore, we explore different categories of AL criteria and their effectiveness in the low-budget regime. These results also provide insight into the cold-start problem, which involves selecting an initial labeled set and is faced by many model-based AL methods.},
  author       = {Jaster, Bjarne and Tharwat, Alaa and Sheikh, Eiram Mahera and Kohlhase, Martin and Schenck, Wolfram},
  booktitle    = {Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases. International Workshops of ECML PKDD 2025, Porto, Portugal, September 15–19, 2025, Revised Selected Papers, Part IV},
  editor       = {Koprinska, Irena and Mendes-Moreira, João and Branco, Paula},
  isbn         = {978-3-032-19104-5},
  issn         = {1865-0937},
  location     = {Porto, Portugal},
  pages        = {5--21},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature Switzerland},
  title        = {{Low Query Budget Active Learning for Classification and Regression}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-032-19105-2_1},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6655,
  author       = {Tharwat, Alaa and Jaster, Bjarne and Schenck, Wolfram and Kohlhase, Martin},
  issn         = {09521976},
  journal      = {Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence},
  publisher    = {Elsevier BV},
  title        = {{Active learning evaluation metrics for classification and regression frameworks}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.engappai.2026.114295},
  volume       = {171},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6940,
  abstract     = {Background: Functional abdominal pain (FAP) is a severely debilitating condition affecting approximately 11.7% of children and adolescents worldwide, often persisting into adulthood and significantly restricting daily life. Health literacy is essential for treatment success. To improve knowledge about the biopsychosocial factors influencing FAP and support its management, we developed an educational multimedia website (https://meine-bauchstelle.com).
Methods: In a multicenter randomised controlled trial (RCT), patients with FAP (N = 166, age 5–17 years, M = 10.8, SD = 3.31; 53.6% female) and their parents were randomly assigned to an intervention group (IG: access to the website before the first measurement) or a control group (CG: no access to the website during data collection). The primary outcome was health literacy (knowledge and health behaviour) and secondary outcomes were abdominal pain symptoms and the physician-patient/parent interactions. Group differences were analysed using t-tests and multilevel models.
Results: Patients in the IG who visited the website demonstrated significantly higher initial knowledge scores compared to the CG. Moreover, they reported significantly less pain-related disability across three assessments over 3 months. Parents who visited the website rated the physician-parent interaction significantly more positively than those in the CG.
Conclusions: The educational website efficiently increased patient knowledge about FAP and improved certain pain-related behaviours. It serves as an effective tool in conveying information about FAP in clinical practice. Future applications could extend to preventive measures in schools and other settings.
Significance Statement: The educational website about functional abdominal pain is effective in transferring knowledge, reducing pain-related disability, and improving physician-parent interactions. It can support physicians in day-to-day clinical practice by referring patients to the website for further information and might be extended as a preventive measure in schools.},
  author       = {Neß, Verena and Humberg, Clarissa and Rau, Lisa‐Marie and Eidt, Leandra and Berger, Thomas and Claßen, Martin and Syring, Nils Christian and Berrang, Jens and Vietor, Christine and Buderus, Stephan and Hirschfeld, Gerrit and Becker‐Emden, Christina and Wager, Julia},
  issn         = {1532-2149},
  journal      = {European Journal of Pain},
  number       = {3},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{A Randomised Controlled Trial Testing the Efficacy of an Educational Website About Functional Abdominal Pain for Children and Adolescents}},
  doi          = {10.1002/ejp.70249},
  volume       = {30},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6938,
  abstract     = {                    Background - 
                    Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is one of the most widely established treatments for mental disorders in children and adolescents and is empirically supported across a wide range of disorders, including evidence from routine care. However, evidence on long-term maintenance of effects in routine outpatient care is still limited, particularly across diagnostic groups. This study examines the long-term, cross-diagnostic effectiveness of CBT in children and adolescents treated under routine outpatient care conditions.
                  <br />
                    Methods - 
                    Analyses are based on pre-existing routine outcome monitoring data from 1225 patients (mean age = 14.00 years, SD = 3.24) receiving CBT, collected between 2017 and 2025. Symptoms were assessed using the parent- and patient-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) at pre-treatment, post-treatment and at 6-, 12- and 24-month follow-ups. Additional self-rated treatment-success ratings were collected at follow-up (covering expectations fulfilled, perceived helpfulness, problem recurrence and perceived change). Effectiveness was described using group means as well as clinical significance. Pre- to post- and pre- to follow-up changes were analysed using paired Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Associations between follow-up SDQ scores and self-rated treatment success were examined using partial Spearman correlations controlling for baseline SDQ.
                  <br />
                    Results - 
                    
                      Across both parent- and patient-reported SDQ assessments, total difficulties and problem subscales showed significant improvements from pre- to post-treatment and from pre-treatment to all follow-up time points. Effect sizes were consistently moderate-to-large
                      (
                      r_rb = 0.59–0.77), with sustained effects up to 24 months. Higher follow-up SDQ difficulties were associated with lower self-rated treatment success across multiple follow-up ratings, with strongest associations observed for problem recurrence and change compared to before treatment. Sensitivity analyses restricted to participants in the clinical range at baseline (SDQ ≥ 17) yielded consistent results.
                    
                  <br />
                    Conclusions - 
                    Routine outpatient CBT for children and adolescents was associated with meaningful symptom improvements that persisted up to two years after treatment. Clinically significant change analyses indicated that while many patients showed reliable improvement, a substantial proportion remained classified as unchanged according to conservative criteria. Subjective follow-up ratings were consistent with standardized symptom outcomes, supporting the perceived durability of treatment success under routine care conditions in a diagnostically heterogeneous sample.
                  },
  author       = {Hüwelmeier, Matthis Michael and Staniczek, Lena and Schneider, Silvia and Zhang, Xiao Chi and Wannemüller, André and Hirschfeld, Gerrit and Krause, Karen and Friedrich, Sören and von Brachel, Ruth},
  issn         = {2050-7283},
  journal      = {BMC Psychology},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC},
  title        = {{Long-term effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for children and adolescents in routine care}},
  doi          = {10.1186/s40359-026-04667-3},
  volume       = {14},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6924,
  author       = {Berger, Ursula and Biehler, Rolf and Binder, Karin and Elmer, Christina and Ertz, Florian and Hotz, Thomas and Huber, Sarah and Ickstadt, Katja and Kauermann, Göran and Küchenhoff, Helmut and Lübke, Karsten and Münnich, Ralf and Schüller, Katharina and Skill, Thomas and Weihs, Claus and Weinert, Henrike and Weisser, Christoph},
  issn         = {1863-8163},
  journal      = {AStA Wirtschafts- und Sozialstatistisches Archiv},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Daten, Künstliche Intelligenz und Evidenz - neue Anforderungen an die Statistikausbildung an Hochschulen: Diskussion und Erwiderung}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s11943-026-00372-0},
  year         = {2026},
}

@inbook{6926,
  abstract     = {Inklusion ist ein umfassendes Menschenrecht und zentraler Bezugspunkt für Selbstvertreter:innen und soziale Bewegungen. Ziel ist, dass alle Menschen gleichberechtigt und selbstbestimmt teilhaben. Während grundlegende Weichenstellungen oft auf überregionaler Ebene durch politische Entscheidungen und rechtliche Rahmenbedingungen erfolgen, wirken lokal-kommunale Eigenlogiken maßgeblich auf individuelle Lebensrealitäten. Der Sammelband fokussiert die Perspektiven von Menschen mit Behinderungen und diskutiert mit diesem Bezug Ansätze inklusiver Kommunal- und Regionalentwicklung. Dabei kommen verschiedene Handlungsfelder zur Sprache, wie die kommunalpolitische Arbeit und ihre rechtlichen Grundlagen, Stadt- und Quartiersplanung ebenso wie Kinder- und Jugendarbeit, Soziale Arbeit mit Frauen* und Mädchen* sowie Hochschule und Peer-to-Peer-Beratung. (DIPF/Orig.)              },
  author       = {Lammers, Klara},
  booktitle    = {Inklusive Kommunal- und Regionalentwicklung zur Teilhabe von Menschen mit Behinderungen. Impulse und Strategien},
  editor       = {Cudak, Karin and Schachler, Viviane},
  isbn         = {9783886179213},
  pages        = {257--271},
  publisher    = {Verlag Julius Klinkhardt},
  title        = {{Peer-Unterstützung im Kontext von Behinderung und (psychischer) Beeinträchtigung. Umsetzung "vor Ort" durch Peer-Begleitung und EUTB}},
  doi          = {10.35468/6231-15},
  year         = {2026},
}

@phdthesis{6914,
  author       = {Mechtenberg, Malte},
  publisher    = {Universität Bielefeld},
  title        = {{Advancements In Biosignal Analysis For Models of Musculotendon Actuators. Ultrasound B-Mode Imaging for Tendon Stiffness Estimation and sEMG Forward Modelling for In Vivo Innervation Zone Tracking}},
  doi          = {10.4119/UNIBI/3016397},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6901,
  abstract     = {Freeform optics belong to the increasingly important elements in optical research and industry, which pose several challenges regarding design and highly precise manufacturing. First being used in cameras and for focusing, nowadays freeform optics are used in a broad range of applications, from lighting to LiDAR, from endoscopy to photovoltaics, and from astronomical instruments to quantum cryptography. Designing freeform optics can be based on different theories and methods. Fabrication is possible by mechanical methods, such as diamond turning or high-precision milling, often followed by different polishing techniques, as well as laser-based techniques, mainly applying different lithographic techniques. Here, we give an overview of recent design and optimization methods, production methods used during the last years, and applications of freeform optics, including the possibility to combine freeform optics with tunability for different applications. We describe the opportunities of new applications as well as common problems and give an outlook towards future directions of research and development.},
  author       = {Blachowicz, Tomasz and Ehrmann, Guido and Fiedler, Johannes and Kaschuba, Reinhard and Ehrmann, Andrea},
  issn         = {2673-8023},
  journal      = {Micro},
  keywords     = {photopolymerization, tunable micro-optical freeform elements, two-photon polymerization, multiphoton lithography, direct laser writing, diamond turning},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {MDPI AG},
  title        = {{Freeform Micro-Optical Elements—Recent Production Techniques, Opportunities and Challenges}},
  doi          = {10.3390/micro6020035},
  volume       = {6},
  year         = {2026},
}

@techreport{6893,
  author       = {Schoden, Fabian},
  pages        = {S. 18--19},
  title        = {{KI in Prüfungen: Kontrollverlust oder Chance?}},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6896,
  abstract     = {Biosensors have a recognition element that detects a bioanalyte as well as a transducer that transfers the measured physicochemical properties into an electric signal, which is amplified, processed, and depicted on a user interface and usually stored in a data storage system. Such biosensors can be used in a broad range of applications, from personalized medicine to drug discovery, and from food safety to plant disease diagnosis. Portable biosensors are often based on microfluidic systems or micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS), measuring physical or chemical parameters. In spite of their importance for diverse applications, there are still several limits regarding the portability of biosensors, which is often necessary. Besides the required miniaturization of the components and the limited lifetime of some biological reagents, sample preparation and handling can be problematic. This review gives an overview of recent biosensor research, concentrating on optical measurements, and shows the possibilities and limits of the biosensors developed during the last few years.},
  author       = {Blachowicz, Tomasz and Ehrmann, Guido and Stepula, Elzbieta and Ehrmann, Andrea},
  issn         = {2072-666X},
  journal      = {Micromachines},
  keywords     = {portable biosensors, point-of-care diagnosis, optical sensors, microfluidics},
  number       = {5},
  publisher    = {MDPI AG},
  title        = {{Optical Biosensors—Principles of Operation and Applications}},
  doi          = {10.3390/mi17050579},
  volume       = {17},
  year         = {2026},
}

@misc{6890,
  abstract     = {Layout und Illustrationen des digitalen Magazins wurden erstellt von: Margarita Sommerfeld},
  author       = {Meisen, Jutta},
  keywords     = {Designdidaktik, Nachhaltigkeit, BNE, Systems Thinking, Futures Thinking, Kreativmethoden},
  title        = {{Re-Learning Fashion: Methodische Bausteine für eine zukunftsfähige Designausbildung}},
  doi          = {10.57720/6890},
  year         = {2026},
}

@inproceedings{6835,
  author       = {Lammert, Maike and Bauer, Nicola H.  and Bernloehr, Annette},
  keywords     = {Promotion, Frühgeburt, Hebammenbetreuung, Verbesserung der Gesundheitsversorgung},
  location     = {Leipzig},
  title        = {{Das Potenzial einer umfassenden Hebammenbetreuung für Mütter* frühgeborener Kinder mit einem Geburtsgewicht unter 1.500g}},
  doi          = {10.57720/6835},
  volume       = {01/2026},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6806,
  abstract     = {Unternehmen stehen heute vor komplexen Herausforderungen, die sie nur gemeinsam mit externen Partnern bewältigen können. Open Innovation hat sich daher zu einem zentralen Innovationsparadigma entwickelt. Dieser Artikel richtet den Blick auf eine weiterhin unterschätzte Open-Innovation-Variante: die Zusammenarbeit zwischen Unternehmen und Hochschulen. Die Voraussetzungen dafür sind günstig, denn Hochschulen treiben ihre Third Mission – den Wissens- und Technologietransfer in Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft – zunehmend voran.
Neben den Ausführungen zu Open Innovation mit Hochschulen und dem Nutzen des Bedeutungsgewinns der Third Mission stellt der Beitrag zentrale Formate der Zusammenarbeit vor. Forschungsergebnisse zeigen, dass Unternehmen mit Hochschulkontakten in besonderem Maße innovativ sind. Um diese Wirkung breiter zu entfalten, gilt es, insbesondere kleine und mittlere Unternehmen stärker in solche Kooperationsformen zu bringen.},
  author       = {Petersen, Mirko and Ballschmieter, Ingo and Kampe, Tim},
  issn         = {2198-3151},
  journal      = {Ideen- und Innovationsmanagement},
  keywords     = {Open Innovation, Third Mission, Wissenstransfer, Technologietransfer, Hochschulkooperation, Forschung & Entwicklung},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {38--42},
  publisher    = {Erich Schmidt Verlag},
  title        = {{Open Innovation trifft Third Mission: Hochschulen als Schlüsselpartner für Unternehmen}},
  doi          = {10.37307/j.2198-3151.2026.01.11},
  volume       = {52},
  year         = {2026},
}

@techreport{6827,
  abstract     = {Introduction: Migration is a complicated social phenomenon that has a big impact on people's access to and use of health care, especially for vulnerable groups like women and children. The study was carried out to determine the factors affecting the potential use of health services and their usage by female Turkish migrants and their children living in Bielefeld, Germany.
Methods: The study adopted a qualitative design, and in-depth individual interview interviews were used to collect data. Interviews were conducted with 20 female Turkish migrants who have children with food allergies between November-December 2023. The data were analyzed using the content analysis method. 
Results: The ages of the female Turkish migrants participating in the study ranged from 31 to 48. A total of 4 themes were determined from the codes: 1) Perceptions on health services, 2) Perceptions of health care service in Germany compared to the country of origin, 3) Healthcare utilization and comparative perceptions of health systems, and 4) Factors that facilitate access to health services and increase satisfaction and suggestions for improvement. 
Discussion: Mothers have both positive and negative experiences with the German healthcare system, their perceptions of the German healthcare system are influenced by their experiences in their home country, there are factors that increase their satisfaction, they encounter individual and systemic barriers in healthcare service utilization, and they made some suggestions for overcoming these barriers.
},
  author       = {Makowsky, Katja and Sezer Efe, Yağmur },
  keywords     = {German healthcare system, factors affecting the potential use of health services, female Turkish migrants, their children},
  title        = {{UTILIZATION AND USE OF HEALTH SERVICES BY FEMALE TURKISH MIGRANTS AND THEIR CHILDREN LIVING IN GERMANY}},
  doi          = {10.57720/6827},
  year         = {2026},
}

@inproceedings{6832,
  author       = {Pottharst, Bill and Altenhöner., Thomas},
  booktitle    = {Gerontechnology},
  issn         = {1569-111X},
  pages        = {1--1},
  publisher    = {International Society for Gerontechnology (ISG)},
  title        = {{Self-Determined Community Living through Technology Adoption among Older Adults: An Action Research Study in Caring Communities}},
  doi          = {10.4017/gt.2026.25.2.1344.3},
  year         = {2026},
}

@article{6586,
  author       = {Grebe, Christian and Nadolny, Stephan and Palmdorf, Sarah and Heitland, Lisa and Fechner, Meike and Maaß, Annika and Latteck, Änne-Dörte},
  issn         = {1472-6955},
  journal      = {BMC Nursing},
  publisher    = {Springer Science and Business Media LLC},
  title        = {{Impact of nurse-led home visits on medication management and use of medical screenings for adults with intellectual disabilities: a randomised-controlled trial}},
  doi          = {10.1186/s12912-026-04317-4},
  year         = {2026},
}

