Yu XQ, De Angelis R, Luo Q, Kahn C, Houssami N, O'Connell DL. A population-based study of breast cancer prevalence in Australia: predicting the future health care needs of women living with breast cancer. BMC Cancer. 2014; 14: 936....
Recommended statistics Overview Incidence and prevalence Mortality Risk factorsKey insights Most commonly diagnosed cancer in Australia Number of deaths caused by lung cancer in Australia Leading cancer among males in Australia Get more insights Report on the topic Top Seller Explore this report...
Aim: The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) is a major national agency established by the Australian government to provide reliable, regular and relevant information and statistics on Australia's health and welfare. The AIHW publishes updated information on survival and prevalence of c...
Dr. Dorothy Mary Keefe: The conference theme of integration and cooperation encourages me because we can achieve so much more when we collaborate than when we work alone. In Australia, the national cancer plan was created because individual states were unable to achieve what the national plan cou...
This isn't the first study to deliver a dismal outlook on the future of cancer prevalence. In February, theWorld Health Organizationpredicted more than 35 million new cancer cases by 2050, a 77% increase from the estimated 20 million cases predicted in 2022. The survey looked at both men an...
Countries with high HIV burden and relatively more donor financing for health had more comprehensive cervical cancer policies; there was no apparent association with cervical cancer mortality, female representation in government, or economic indicators (poverty prevalence or income inequality). Policy summar...
Results: In 2011, one in every 27 people living in WA had been diagnosed with cancer at some time in their lifetime, and one in 68 had been diagnosed within the previous five years. Between 1992 and 2011, complete cancer prevalence in Western Australia increased by a magnitude of 2.5-...
Some of these differences can be explained, in part at least, by differences in risk factor prevalence. Indigenous Australians also have higher mortality and lower survival from cancer as a whole than other Australians. More advanced disease at diagnosis, and possibly poorer treatment, are partly ...
Of the 160 studies that scored <15 points on the methodological quality assessment, most were performed in North America (n = 46), and the least in Australia/New Zealand (n = 6). In 24 studies, the primary objective was to evaluate the prevalence of pain in cancer patients. Most ...
Top, prevalence of different types of kataegis and their association with SVs (≤1 kb from the focus). Bottom, the distribution of the number of foci of kataegis per sample. Chromoplexy. Prevalence of chromoplexy across cancer types, subdivided into balanced translocations and more complex ...