Cancer Survivorship Statistics
Trends in cancer statistics, this "Did You Know?" video from the National Cancer Institute looks at cancer survivorship in the United States. For more: - On cancer survivorship, www.can...... Author: ncigov Added: 02/20/2015 (Source: Oncology Tube)
Source: Oncology Tube - February 20, 2015 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: podcasts

Liver Cancer Statistics
A look at trends in the United States. A video from the National Cancer Institute. Here is NCI's information on liver cancer: http://www.cancer.gov/liver... Find more cancer statistics from NCI'... Author: ncigov Added: 02/20/2015 (Source: Oncology Tube)
Source: Oncology Tube - February 20, 2015 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: podcasts

Bladder Cancer Statistics
This video from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) looks at bladder cancer trends in the United States. Here is NCI's information on bladder cancer: www.cancer.gov/bladder... Find more cancer sta... Author: ncigov Added: 02/20/2015 (Source: Oncology Tube)
Source: Oncology Tube - February 20, 2015 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: podcasts

Updating Epilepsy Epidemiology Statistics
Dr Wilner discusses the importance of a new epidemiologic survey of epilepsy in the United States with investigator Dr Sandra Heller. (Source: Medscape Neurology Podcast)
Source: Medscape Neurology Podcast - February 6, 2015 Category: Neurology Authors: Medscape Source Type: podcasts

Nature Extra: Backchat March 2016
Misused statistics, the latest gossip on Google’s Go-playing AI, and watching mathematicians win prizes. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

December 2014: Model-based vs Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction
ARTICLE DISCUSSED: Standard and Reduced Radiation Dose Liver CT Images: Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction versus Model- based Iterative Reconstruction—Comparison of Findings and Image Quality. Radiology 2014;273(3):793- 800. (Source: Radiology Podcasts)
Source: Radiology Podcasts - November 24, 2014 Category: Radiology Authors: The Radiological Society of North America Tags: Podcasts Source Type: podcasts

December 2014: Model-based vs Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction
ARTICLE DISCUSSED: Standard and Reduced Radiation Dose Liver CT Images: Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction versus Model-based Iterative Reconstruction—Comparison of Findings and Image Quality. Radiology 2014;273(3):793-800. (Source: Radiology Podcasts)
Source: Radiology Podcasts - October 23, 2014 Category: Radiology Authors: The Radiological Society of North America Tags: Podcasts Source Type: podcasts

Necitumumab Effective Antibody Against EGFR for Squamous Lung Cancer Patients?
http://cancerGRACE.org/... Dr. Nasser Hanna discusses the SQUIRE trial of the EGFR antibody Necitumumab in patients with squamous lung cancer. Though it achieved a statistical increase in OS, he does ... Author: cancergrace Added: 07/23/2014 (Source: Oncology Tube)
Source: Oncology Tube - July 23, 2014 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: podcasts

HPV Oral Cancer and Cervical Cancer: A Study
This study reviews HPV oral cancer and its potential link to cervical cancer, differences between mobile and static populations, behavioral differences between whites and African Americans and age specific lifestyle differences. (Source: MUSC Cancer Podcast)
Source: MUSC Cancer Podcast - April 5, 2014 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Medical University of South Carolina Source Type: podcasts

TWiV 272: Give peas a chance
Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Dickson Despommier, Alan Dove, Rich Condit, and Kathy Spindler The TWiV team describes aphid control by using a viral capsid protein to deliver a spider toxin to plants, and a human endogenous retrovirus that enhances expression of a neuronal gene. Links for this episode Toxin delivery to plants by viral capsid protein (Nat Biotech) Pea enation mosaic virus (ViralZone) Image credit: Aphid membrane feeding chamber (Sci Rep) Aphid feeding chamber (YouTube) Parafilm (Wikipedia) Human endogenous retrovirus enhances neural gene (PNAS) F...
Source: This Week in Virology - MP3 Edition - February 16, 2014 Category: Virology Authors: Vincent Racaniello Source Type: podcasts

Melanoma Updates from the 2013 World Melanoma Conference – Dr. Michael Smylie
For more updates visit www.oncologyeducation.com... Introduction to Current Statistics and Survival of Melanoma, Targeted Therapies in Melanoma, Resistance to BRAF Inhibition, Novel Immune Therapy for... Author: oncologyeducation Added: 10/21/2013 (Source: Oncology Tube)
Source: Oncology Tube - October 21, 2013 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: podcasts

Missing data
The problem of missing data is well known, especially in cases where drug companies conceal evidence. However pharmaceutical industry misconduct is not the only cause, and a cluster of papers in this week's BMJ show how aspects of the culture of medical science contribute to the problem. Elizabeth Loder, BMJ's clinical editor, talks to Harlan Krumholz (Harold H Hines Jr professor of medicine at Yale University) and Joseph Ross (assistant professor of medicine, also at Yale) about missing data from US publicly funded trials. Lisa Bero (professor at the Department of Clinical Pharmacy, University of California) describes how...
Source: The BMJ Podcast - August 27, 2013 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Renal patient records
A feature this week asks "Should patients be able to control their own records?". The website renalpatientview.org allows patients to do exactly that. Neil Turner, a professor of nephrology at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, explains how he and colleagues developed the resource. Also Steven Woloshin and Lisa Schwartz, authors of the "Not So Stories" column have turned their statistical scrutiny onto a recent advert by Susan G. Komen for the Cure®, the breast cancer charity. They explain how the case for mammography has been massively oversold. (Source: The BMJ Podcast)
Source: The BMJ Podcast - August 27, 2013 Category: General Medicine Authors: BMJ Group Source Type: podcasts

Many Studies Have 'Elementary Statistical Errors'
Can the clinician and the statistician be friends? Andrew Vickers argues that they must work together more closely in order to conduct reliable, useful research that improves patient care. (Source: Medscape Diabetes & Endocrinology Podcast)
Source: Medscape Diabetes & Endocrinology Podcast - May 23, 2013 Category: Endocrinology Authors: Medscape Source Type: podcasts