The aim of this study is to compare cancer survivals of Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians and consider health-service and research implications Cancer registry data from South Australia were used to calculate disease-specific survivals for Indigenous (n=671) and sampled non-Indigenous (n=15,799) patients diagnosed during 1977-2007, using Kaplan-Meier estimates and Cox proportional hazards regression. Indigenous and non-Indigenous five-year survivals were respectively: 40% and 57% for all cancer sites combined; 61% and 80% for female breast; 34% and 56% for colon/rectum; and 63% and 73% for cervix; whereas one-year survivals for cancers of unknown primary site were 5% and 22% respectively. Conversely, although not statistically signi...
Objective: To investigate whether Indigenous Australians with cancer have more advanced disease at d...
Objective: To examine the differential in cancer survival between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peop...
Background: While cancer survival among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples has improved o...
BACKGROUND: National cancer survival statistics are available for the total Australian population bu...
Background: Indigenous Australians do not have the high standard of health that Australians in gener...
Background Indigenous Australians do not have the high standard of health that Australians in genera...
Background: Indigenous Australians have lower overall cancer survival which has not yet been fully e...
Objective: To examine the differential in cancer survival between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peop...
BACKGROUND: Overall, Indigenous Australians with cancer are diagnosed with more advanced disease, re...
Data from the South Australian Cancer Registry (SACR) for 1977-2003 were used to calculate expected ...
Abstract Context: The burden of cancer for Indigenous people in general has not been comprehensively...
BACKGROUND: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia have been found to have poore...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women have a higher mortality rate due to gynecologic cancer c...
© 2016. Background: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (referred to in this paper as "Abor...
An assessment of recent data on cancer in Indigenous Australians (Aborigines and Torres Strait Islan...
Objective: To investigate whether Indigenous Australians with cancer have more advanced disease at d...
Objective: To examine the differential in cancer survival between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peop...
Background: While cancer survival among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples has improved o...
BACKGROUND: National cancer survival statistics are available for the total Australian population bu...
Background: Indigenous Australians do not have the high standard of health that Australians in gener...
Background Indigenous Australians do not have the high standard of health that Australians in genera...
Background: Indigenous Australians have lower overall cancer survival which has not yet been fully e...
Objective: To examine the differential in cancer survival between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peop...
BACKGROUND: Overall, Indigenous Australians with cancer are diagnosed with more advanced disease, re...
Data from the South Australian Cancer Registry (SACR) for 1977-2003 were used to calculate expected ...
Abstract Context: The burden of cancer for Indigenous people in general has not been comprehensively...
BACKGROUND: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia have been found to have poore...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women have a higher mortality rate due to gynecologic cancer c...
© 2016. Background: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (referred to in this paper as "Abor...
An assessment of recent data on cancer in Indigenous Australians (Aborigines and Torres Strait Islan...
Objective: To investigate whether Indigenous Australians with cancer have more advanced disease at d...
Objective: To examine the differential in cancer survival between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peop...
Background: While cancer survival among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples has improved o...