Search results for "Survivorship"

showing 10 items of 26 documents

Cohort Profile:The Socioeconomic Consequences in Adult Life After Childhood Cancer in Scandinavia (SALiCCS) Research Programme

2021

IntroductionThe growing number of survivors of childhood cancer, with many years of life ahead, demonstrates the increasing clinical and public health relevance of investigating the risks of social and socioeconomic impairment after a childhood cancer diagnosis and the life-saving treatment. To enrich understanding of the mental, social and socioeconomic difficulties that childhood cancer survivors may face during their life-course, identify particularly vulnerable survivors and overcome the limitations of previous research, we initiated the Socioeconomic Consequences in Adult Life after Childhood Cancer in Scandinavia (SALiCCS) research programme.MethodsThis Nordic cross-border research pr…

Cancer Researchchildhood cancer survivorsDenmark3122 CancersChildhood cancer610 Medicine & healthsocial and socioeconomic outcomes03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine3123 Gynaecology and paediatrics360 Social problems & social servicesMedicine030212 general & internal medicineSocioeconomic statusRC254-282FinlandOriginal ResearchSwedenbusiness.industry1. No povertyNeoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensregister-based research3. Good healthAdult lifeOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCohortfamily lifebusinesssurvivorshipDemography
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Childhood cancer:Survival, treatment modalities, late effects and improvements over time

2021

Since the 1960s, paediatric oncologists have gradually become better organised in large study groups and participation in clinical trials is today considered as the standard of care, with most children with cancer in Europe and North America being enrolled on available treatment protocols. Chemotherapy is nowadays the main element of therapy, but irradiation is still required for some patients. With the advent of multimodality therapy and supportive care, five-year cancer survival exceeds 80 % in most European and North American countries today. The substantial improvements in survival led to a constantly growing population of childhood cancer survivors. Concerns regarding the risk of late …

Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsSurvivalEpidemiologyPopulationMultimodality TherapySurvivorshipSocial and socioeconomic conditions03 medical and health sciencesSomatic late effects0302 clinical medicineQuality of life (healthcare)NeoplasmsSurvivorship curvemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineChild610 Medicine & healthIntensive care medicineeducationSocioeconomic statusClinical Trials as Topiceducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryCancerTemporal changesmedicine.diseaseCombined Modality TherapySurvival AnalysisMental healthSurvivor cohortsEuropeClinical trialTreatment OutcomeOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCancer treatmentNorth AmericaMental late effectsbusinessChildhood cancer360 Social problems & social services
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Educational needs in gastrointestinal cancer: a consensus position paper from the ESMO Gastrointestinal Cancer Faculty

2019

Gastrointestinal (GI) cancers are common in all parts of the world. Effective prevention and early detection of GI cancers are not universally implemented. Therefore, it must be anticipated that the incidence and the mortality of GI cancers will remain high within the next decades. The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Gastrointestinal Cancer Faculty aims to increase the skills of medical oncologists and other disciplines involved in treating GI malignancies. We aimed to increase the survival chances for patients with GI cancers, augment their quality of life and enable successful return to normal social and professional life during the period of survivorship. ESMO also aims to d…

Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtygastrointestinal cancerDelphi methodEarly detectionReviewlcsh:RC254-282decision makingmultidisciplinarity03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineQuality of life (healthcare)Survivorship curveparasitic diseasesMedicine030212 general & internal medicineGastrointestinal cancer1506educationbusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)social sciencesmedicine.diseaselcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens3. Good healthOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisFamily medicinePosition paperpopulation characteristicsclinical trainingbusinessGi cancerhuman activities
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Physical inactivity and low fitness deserve more attention to alter cancer risk and prognosis.

2015

Abstract Sedentary lifestyle is associated with elevated cancer risk whereas regular physical activity (PA) and high cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) have the opposite effect, with several biologic mechanisms mediating such associations. There is a need for lifestyle interventions aimed at increasing the PA levels and CRF of the general population and particularly cancer survivors. Furthermore, provocative data suggest a dose-dependent benefit of increasing levels of PA and/or CRF against cancer risk or mortality. Thus, current PA guidelines (≥150 min/wk of moderate-to-vigorous PA) may not be sufficiently rigorous for preventing cancer nor for extending cancer survivorship. Research targetin…

Cancer survivorshipGerontologyOncologyCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyCondición física - EjerciciosPopulationPhysical fitnessSedentary lifestylecancer; prevention; Sedentary lifestyleDiseaseArticleOncologíapreventionRisk FactorsInternal medicineNeoplasmsMedicineHumanscancereducationExerciseSedentary lifestyleeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryCancerCardiorespiratory fitnessCáncerDeportemedicine.diseasePrognosisEjercicio físicoOncologyPhysical FitnessSedentary BehaviorbusinessCancer risk
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Employment status and occupational positions of childhood cancer survivors from Denmark, Finland and Sweden: A Nordic register-based cohort study fro…

2021

Background: A childhood cancer diagnosis and late effects of treatment may affect survivors' possibilities of employment or highly skilled occupations later in life. In this study, we compared the employment and occupational status of childhood cancer survivors with population comparisons and siblings.Methods: In a cohort study based on Nordic registers, we identified 10 461 survivors of childhood cancer diagnosed before age 20 years in Denmark, Finland and Sweden since 1971. Survivors were compared with 48 928 population comparisons matched to survivors by age, sex and geographical region and 12 605 siblings of survivors. Annual outcome information on employment, unemployment, health-relat…

DenmarkOccupational prestigemedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationPsychological intervention610 Medicine & healthSurvivorshipLogistic regressionDanish360 Social problems & social servicesEmployment statusSurvivorship curveInternal MedicineMedicineeducation610 Medicine & healthFinlandmedia_commonSwedenOccupationeducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryHealth Policylanguage.human_languagehumanitiesPopulation-based cohort studyOncologyUnemploymentlanguagePublic aspects of medicineRA1-1270Childhood cancerNordic register studybusiness360 Social problems & social servicesResearch PaperCohort studyDemography
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Plant fossil record and survival analyses

2012

Cascales-Minana, B. & Cleal, C.J. 2011: Plant fossil record and survival analyses. Lethaia, Vol. 45, pp. 71–82. Survival analysis is a classic palaeobiological method widely used on the animal fossil record. This study reports the first application of survivorship analyses on the plant fossil record from a global viewpoint and provides a new comparative approach of this methodology. The results reveal three important plant extinction events in the history of plant life at a global scale. The results also clearly suggest that the origination events are more intensive than extinction processes and that the origination moment of several lineages of vascular plants is an important factor that c…

Extinction eventExtinctionFossil RecordEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectLongevityfood and beveragesPaleontologysocial sciencesBiologyhumanitiesPlant lifeSurvivorship curveOriginationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonLethaia
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Does the sex of firstborn children influence subsequent fertility behavior? evidence from family reconstitution.

2006

According to recent studies in evolutionary anthropology, firstborn daughters influence both parity progression and sibling survival by acting as so-called helpers at the nest. Based on 534 sets of household data from family reconstitution, the current analysis fails to show that offspring sex had any direct impact on maternal fertility, sibling survivorship, birth spacing, or reproductive span. Instead, the results indicate that fertility decisions were heavily affected by proximate factors such as child mortality and gender preferences. Families who had experienced child death were swift to substitute the loss with another pregnancy—a phenomenon known as replacement strategy. Similarly, …

MaleFirstbornOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectFertilitySex FactorsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PregnancySurvivorship curveHumansSiblingChildmedia_commonFamily CharacteristicsSiblingsChild mortalityDeathBirth orderParityAnthropologyFemaleBirth OrderPsychologyParity (mathematics)Social Sciences (miscellaneous)DemographyJournal of family history
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The re-emergence of memory recovery: return of seduction theory and birth of survivorship

2005

This paper comprises an analysis of an aspect of the history of psychiatric/psychological knowledge. The case in point is the transience of the notion of memory recovery in the context of childhood sexual abuse. By transience is meant that the concept of memory recovery apparently vanished and re-emerged despite the fact that its source, childhood sexual abuse, did not disappear. Such abuse is a fairly common phenomenon worldwide, whereas memory recovery seems to be temporally and locally limited. Is it possible to say that psychiatric/psychological knowledge of memory recovery is also context-dependent and culture-bound? If so, what would this mean in relation to the applicability of this…

Memory recoveryHistoryHistory and Philosophy of SciencePoint (typography)Survivorship curveContext (language use)PsychologyDevelopmental psychologyHistory of psychiatryHistory of the Human Sciences
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Cancer: New Needs, New Models. Is It Time for a Community Oncologist? Another Brick in the Wall

2021

Simple Summary Community care activity in the oncology field does not exist. This unmet need contrasts with the increasing number of patients with a previous diagnosis of cancer. Abstract Over the last few decades, thanks to early detection, effective drugs, and personalized treatments, the natural history of cancer has radically changed. Thanks to these advances, we have observed how survival of cancer patients has increased, becoming an ever more important goal in cancer care. Effective clinical governance of survivorship care is essential to ensure a successful transition between active and post-treatment life, identifying optimization of healthcare outcomes and quality of life for patie…

OncologyCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/06 - Oncologia MedicaEarly detectionSettore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicataclinical governance03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineQuality of life (healthcare)Internal medicineSurvivorship curveIntervention (counseling)Health caremedicine030212 general & internal medicineRC254-282Clinical governancebusiness.industryCancerNeoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensmedicine.diseasecommunity oncologyNatural historycancer survivorshipOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPerspectivebusinessPsychologyCancers
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European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) position paper on supportive and palliative care

2018

Oncology has come a long way in addressing patients' quality of life, together with developing surgical, radio-oncological and medical anticancer therapies. However, the multiple and varying needs of patients are still not beingmet adequately as part of routine cancer care. Supportive and palliative care interventions should be integrated, dynamic, personalised and based on best evidence. They should start at the time of diagnosis and continue through to end-of-life or survivorship. ESMO is committed to excellence in all aspects of oncological care during the continuum of the cancer experience. Following the 2003 ESMO stand on supportive and palliative care (Cherny N, Catane R, Kosmidis P. …

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyPalliative caremedia_common.quotation_subjectPatient-Centered Care/methodsPsychological interventionPatient-centred care03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineQuality of life (healthcare)Multidisciplinary approachExcellenceInternal medicineSurvivorship curveNeoplasmsPatient-Centered CaremedicineNeoplasms/therapyHumansPosition paper030212 general & internal medicinemedia_commonPalliative Care/methodsTerminal Carebusiness.industryPalliative CareCancerHematologyESMOmedicine.diseaseTerminal Care/methodsMultidisciplinarityOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPractice Guidelines as TopicPalliative careQuality of LifePosition paperbusinessSupportive care
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