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Mashup Score: 0Wolters Kluwer Health - 1 year(s) ago
JavaScript Error JavaScript has been disabled on your browser. You must enable it to continue. Here’s how to enable JavaScript in the following browsers: Internet Explorer From the Tools menu, select Options Click the Content tab Select Enable JavaScript Firefox From the Tools…
Source: lww.comCategories: Hem/Onc News and Journals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Wolters Kluwer Health - 1 year(s) ago
JavaScript Error JavaScript has been disabled on your browser. You must enable it to continue. Here’s how to enable JavaScript in the following browsers: Internet Explorer From the Tools menu, select Options Click the Content tab Select Enable JavaScript Firefox From the Tools…
Source: lww.comCategories: Hem/Onc News and Journals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
Research published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology seeks to inform best practices in establishing smoking cessation programs across cancer care centers.
Source: Oncology Nursing NewsCategories: Hem/Onc News and Journals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Smoking Cessation Interventions - 1 year(s) ago
In the United States, 1 in 5 adults uses tobacco products. Cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable disease and death in the United States despite its known health effects. Although nearly one-half of people who smoke try to quit each year, only up to 1 in 20 who quit without support achieve abstinence for at least six months. All patients, including school-aged children and…
Source: www.aafp.orgCategories: General Medicine Journals and Societies, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Patients With Serious Mental Illness Can Engage in Tobacco Treatment Trials and Tobacco Cessation Interventions During Cancer Treatment - 2 year(s) ago
PURPOSE: More than half of individuals with serious mental illness (SMI) smoke, contributing to premature cancer mortality. A cancer diagnosis provides an opportunity to assist with smoking cessation; however, supportive oncology trials frequently exclude patients with SMI. To fill this gap, we examined differences in engagement and tobacco cessation in a pragmatic clinical trial. METHODS: We…
Source: JCO Oncology PracticeCategories: Hem/Onc News and Journals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Behavior Change Knowledge NOT Applied to Physical Activity - Prof Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko (Pt2) - 2 year(s) ago
Prof. Wojtek Chodzko Zajko is the Shahid and Ann Carlson Khan Endowed Professor of Applied Health Sciences and Dean of the Graduate College at the University…
Source: YouTubeCategories: General Medicine News, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Treating Smoking in Cancer Patients: An Essential Component of Cancer Care—The New National Cancer Institute Tobacco Control Monograph - 2 year(s) ago
PURPOSE: Continued smoking after the diagnosis of cancer can markedly worsen oncology treatment side effects, cancer outcomes, cancer mortality, and all-cause mortality. Conversely, mounting evidence demonstrates that smoking cessation by patients with cancer improves outcomes. A cancer diagnosis often serves as a teachable moment, characterized by high motivation to quit. However, too few…
Source: JCO Oncology PracticeCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Treating Smoking in Cancer Patients: An Essential Component of Cancer Care-The New National Cancer Institute Tobacco Control Monograph - PubMed - 2 year(s) ago
Smoking cessation is among the most effective treatment options for improving the likelihood of survival, quality of life, and overall health of patients with cancer who smoke. It is important for cancer care clinicians and patients to realize that it is never too late to quit smoking and that there …
Source: PubMedCategories: Hem/Onc News and Journals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Great American Smokeout | American Cancer Society - 2 year(s) ago
The American Cancer Society is encouraging people who smoke to make a plan to quit, or to plan in advance and quit smoking with The Great American Smokeout.
Source: www.cancer.orgCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Treating Smoking in Cancer Patients: An Essential Component of Cancer Care—The New National Cancer Institute Tobacco Control Monograph - 2 year(s) ago
PURPOSE: Continued smoking after the diagnosis of cancer can markedly worsen oncology treatment side effects, cancer outcomes, cancer mortality, and all-cause mortality. Conversely, mounting evidence demonstrates that smoking cessation by patients with cancer improves outcomes. A cancer diagnosis often serves as a teachable moment, characterized by high motivation to quit. However, too few…
Source: JCO Oncology PracticeCategories: Hem/Onc News and Journals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
3 QUESTIONS ON... Bone Fracture Risk Among Older Adult Survivors of #Cancer With Erika Rees-Punia, PhD, MPH, Senior Principal Scientist, Epidemiology and Behavioral Research at the @AmericanCancer: https://t.co/5huxeTFr7h #SmokingCessation #CancerSurvivors #Exercise https://t.co/a40hqZKY47