Missed opportunities in educating Aboriginal Australians about bowel cancer screening: whose job is it anyway?

scientific article published in December 2013

Missed opportunities in educating Aboriginal Australians about bowel cancer screening: whose job is it anyway? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.5172/CONU.2013.46.1.59
P698PubMed publication ID24716763

P50authorAliki ChristouQ56586768
P2093author name stringSandra C Thompson
P2860cites workCultural tailoring for mammography and fruit and vegetable intake among low-income African-American women in urban public health centersQ39718039
Shift to earlier stage at diagnosis as a consequence of the National Bowel Cancer Screening ProgramQ44206931
P433issue1
P304page(s)59-69
P577publication date2013-12-01
P1433published inContemporary NurseQ15761570
P1476titleMissed opportunities in educating Aboriginal Australians about bowel cancer screening: whose job is it anyway?
P478volume46

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q89713519Colorectal cancer screening using faecal occult blood tests for Indigenous adults: A systematic literature review of barriers, enablers and implemented strategies
Q24658519Factors contributing to delayed diagnosis of cancer among Aboriginal people in Australia: a qualitative study
Q58265113How colonisation determines social justice and Indigenous health—a review of the literature
Q41283697Perspectives of Aboriginal women on participation in mammographic screening: a step towards improving services
Q39490476Talking about the not talked about: use of, and reactions to, a DVD promoting bowel cancer screening to Aboriginal people

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