Filtered By:
Cancer: Brain Cancers

This page shows you your search results in order of relevance. This is page number 5.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 26098 results found since Jan 2013.

Characterizing internet search patterns for neurologic and neurosurgical conditions following celebrity diagnosis
CONCLUSIONS: Following major events related to the neurological disease of public figures there is an expected rise in Google search interest relevant to these topics. Our findings suggest that there is an optimal window of approximately 2 weeks following each of these events for activist and clinical groups to publicize their desired message, and for the field of neurosurgery and neurological science to increase public awareness regarding specific diseases, with a regression to baseline interest by 4-months following the event.PMID:34763394 | DOI:10.23736/S0390-5616.21.05569-7
Source: Journal of Neurosurgical Sciences - November 12, 2021 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Max S Ward Michael J Feldman Brittany N Ward Vera Ong Nolan J Brown Shane Shahrestani Chen Y Yang Mickey E Abraham Boris Paskhover Anil Nanda Source Type: research

Association Between Cancer Incidence and Mortality in Web-Based Data in China: Infodemiology Study
Conclusions: Search behaviors indeed reflect public awareness of cancer from a different angle. Research on internet search behaviors could present an innovative and timely way to monitor and estimate cancer incidence and mortality rates, especially for cancers not included in national registries.
Source: Journal of Medical Internet Research - January 29, 2019 Category: General Medicine Authors: Chenjie Xu Yi Wang Hongxi Yang Jie Hou Li Sun Xinyu Zhang Xinxi Cao Yabing Hou Lan Wang Qiliang Cai Yaogang Wang Source Type: research

SPM in Real Life: Summer ‘17
NEW MEMBERS: Summer ‘17 Welcome new member, Geoffrey Milos! Geoffrey writes that he has a great interest in electronic health records (EHR) and how they enable individuals to more fully participate in the management of their own health care. Patient access to their respective, complete EHR is key to this empowerment. Individuals seem to be making progress on this front, slowly but surely. Geoffrey is interested in active innovators in the personal health care application space, specifically applications that can accept provider-sourced EHR inputs and other organizations that actively promote individual access to EHR da...
Source: Society for Participatory Medicine - August 18, 2017 Category: General Medicine Authors: Nanette Mattox Tags: Newsletter Community Members New Members Summer '17 Source Type: news

Lessons from Toxicology: Developing a 21st-Century Paradigm for Medical Research
Conclusions Our proposed new research paradigm, adapted from 21st-century toxicology, would involve the following aspects: Developing a big picture of human diseases, integrating extrinsic and intrinsic causes, and linking environmental sciences with medical research using systems biology. Introducing a disease AOP concept, analogous to toxicity AOPs, with the intention of providing a unified framework for describing relevant pathophysiology pathways and networks across multiple biological levels. Creating a strong focus on advanced human-specific research (in vitro, ex vivo, in vivo, and in silico) in place of empirical,...
Source: EHP Research - November 2, 2015 Category: Environmental Health Authors: Web Admin Tags: Brief Communication November 2015 Source Type: research

Medical History in the Hellenic Journal of Nuclear Medicine.
Authors: Otte A, Ahn BC Abstract The Hellenic Journal of Nuclear Medicine is about to celebrate its 20th anniversary end of 2017. On board of the editorial team since 2003, this journal has influenced me like a good friend over the many past years. From time to time, the journal has published interesting and valuable historical notes. They show that nuclear medicine has a history and that medicine is its basis. They also teach us today, and some of the ancient perspectives and approaches are still valid. The reader of HJNM may be interested in these historical contributions, as they are timeless. Therefore, it was ...
Source: Hellenic Journal of Nuclear Medicine - April 22, 2017 Category: Nuclear Medicine Tags: Hell J Nucl Med Source Type: research

Physician Palliative Education Associated With High Use of Hospice Care Service
CONCLUSIONS: Physicians' palliative education was found to be an independent factor associated with higher use of hospice care. The findings suggest increasing palliative and hospice education among physicians so that they can ensure that their patients have high-quality end-of-life medical care in an aging society.PMID:33960206 | DOI:10.1177/10499091211014160
Source: The American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care - May 7, 2021 Category: Palliative Care Authors: Mei-Hsing Chuang Fang-Niarn Lee Yih-Tsong Shiau Hsiu-Yi Shen Chih-Ching Lee Saint Shiou-Sheng Chen Sheng-Jean Huang Source Type: research