Young people describe their prediagnosis cancer experience.

scientific article published on 20 June 2013

Young people describe their prediagnosis cancer experience. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1002/PON.3325
P698PubMed publication ID23784978

P50authorFaith GibsonQ40274251
Daniel KellyQ56966182
P2093author name stringJeremy Whelan
Louise Hooker
Susie Pearce
Tim Eden
Adam Glaser
P2860cites workThe Aarhus statement: improving design and reporting of studies on early cancer diagnosisQ26852129
Measures of promptness of cancer diagnosis in primary care: secondary analysis of national audit data on patients with 18 common and rarer cancersQ30587370
'Being in the same boat': ethnographic insights into an adolescent cancer unit.Q33207813
Socioeconomic patient characteristics predict delay in cancer diagnosis: a Danish cohort studyQ33321693
Time intervals from first symptom to treatment of cancer: a cohort study of 2,212 newly diagnosed cancer patients.Q34057684
How frequently do young people with potential cancer symptoms present in primary care?Q34824678
Interventions to promote cancer awareness and early presentation: systematic reviewQ35015724
Is late diagnosis of lung cancer inevitable? Interview study of patients' recollections of symptoms before diagnosisQ35537567
The journey towards a cancer diagnosis: the experiences of people with cancer, their family and carers.Q35674950
Features of childhood cancer in primary care: a population-based nested case-control studyQ35839097
Psychological factors related to delay in consultation for cancer symptomsQ35873862
The Andersen Model of Total Patient Delay: a systematic review of its application in cancer diagnosisQ35913570
Diagnosing childhood cancer in primary care--a realistic expectation?Q36697140
Do diagnostic delays in cancer matter?Q37466541
Auditing the diagnosis of cancer in primary care: the experience in ScotlandQ37466548
The National Awareness and Early Diagnosis Initiative in England: assembling the evidenceQ37466590
Delay in diagnosis: the experience in DenmarkQ37466632
Cancer survival in England and the influence of early diagnosis: what can we learn from recent EUROCARE results?Q37466651
Why patients delay seeking care for cancer symptoms. What you can do about it.Q37651401
Mapping patients' experiences from initial change in health to cancer diagnosis: a qualitative exploration of patient and system factors mediating this processQ43522052
Variation in number of general practitioner consultations before hospital referral for cancer: findings from the 2010 National Cancer Patient Experience Survey in EnglandQ43728682
The diagnostic process and the boundaries of normalityQ47696499
Parents' accounts of obtaining a diagnosis of childhood cancerQ48954014
Help-seeking behaviour for cancer symptoms: perceptions of patients and general practitioners.Q51059515
Disputed diagnoses: the cases of RSI and childhood cancer.Q52896164
Delays in diagnosis and treatment among children and adolescents with cancer in CanadaQ57089375
Survival of European children and young adults with cancer diagnosed 1995–2002Q57192282
Patients' help-seeking experiences and delay in cancer presentation: a qualitative synthesisQ57302385
P433issue11
P304page(s)2585-2592
P577publication date2013-06-20
P1433published inPsycho-OncologyQ2805644
P1476titleYoung people describe their prediagnosis cancer experience
P478volume22

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q92993122Achieving a timely diagnosis for teenagers and young adults with cancer: the ACE "too young to get cancer?" study
Q34503673Cancer symptom awareness and barriers to medical help seeking in Scottish adolescents: a cross-sectional study.
Q35896812Development and validation of the BRIGHTLIGHT Survey, a patient-reported experience measure for young people with cancer
Q87957374Diagnostic timeliness in adolescents and young adults with cancer: a cross-sectional analysis of the BRIGHTLIGHT cohort
Q35677665Familial diagnostic experiences in paediatric oncology
Q92501316The challenges of making informed decisions about treatment and trial participation following a cancer diagnosis: a qualitative study involving adolescents and young adults with cancer and their caregivers