Background: Australia’s Indigenous people suffer from higher cancer mortality than non-Indigenous Australians, a discrepancy partly caused by differences in beliefs about treatment efficacy between Indigenous patients and their non-Indigenous healthcare providers. This paper critically reviews the literature associated with Indigenous beliefs about cancer treatment, both ‘bush medicine’ and biomedical, in order to provide recommendations to healthcare providers about accommodating Indigenous beliefs when treating cancer. Methods: A search was undertaken of peer-reviewed journal papers using electronic databases and citation snowballing. Papers were selected for inclusion based upon relevance to themes that addressed the research questions. ...
© The Author(s) 2015. Background. The cancer toll on Indigenous Australians is alarming with overall...
Objective We aim to systematically review studies that identify factors influencing cancer treatmen...
Indigenous people experience poorer cancer survival outcomes compared with non- Indigenous people. C...
Background: Aboriginal Australians experience poorer outcomes, and are 2.5 times more likelyto die f...
Background. Little is known about the use of bush medicine and traditional healing among Aboriginal ...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
Objective: Cancer among Indigenous populations in the developed world appears to have increased duri...
Cancer has become one of the major chronic diseases among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peop...
Background: Aboriginal people in Australia experience higher mortality from cancer compared with non...
Background: Cancer ‘patients’ are increasingly using traditional indigenous and complementary medici...
Abstract Background Despite a lower overall incidence, Aboriginal Australians experience poorer outc...
Item does not contain fulltextBackground: Indigenous people experience poorer cancer survival outcom...
This paper provides a thematic review of the literature on cancer in Aboriginal people in Australia,...
Objective: We aim to systematically review studies that identify factors influencing cancer treatmen...
© The Author(s) 2015. Background. The cancer toll on Indigenous Australians is alarming with overall...
Objective We aim to systematically review studies that identify factors influencing cancer treatmen...
Indigenous people experience poorer cancer survival outcomes compared with non- Indigenous people. C...
Background: Aboriginal Australians experience poorer outcomes, and are 2.5 times more likelyto die f...
Background. Little is known about the use of bush medicine and traditional healing among Aboriginal ...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
Objective: Cancer among Indigenous populations in the developed world appears to have increased duri...
Cancer has become one of the major chronic diseases among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peop...
Background: Aboriginal people in Australia experience higher mortality from cancer compared with non...
Background: Cancer ‘patients’ are increasingly using traditional indigenous and complementary medici...
Abstract Background Despite a lower overall incidence, Aboriginal Australians experience poorer outc...
Item does not contain fulltextBackground: Indigenous people experience poorer cancer survival outcom...
This paper provides a thematic review of the literature on cancer in Aboriginal people in Australia,...
Objective: We aim to systematically review studies that identify factors influencing cancer treatmen...
© The Author(s) 2015. Background. The cancer toll on Indigenous Australians is alarming with overall...
Objective We aim to systematically review studies that identify factors influencing cancer treatmen...
Indigenous people experience poorer cancer survival outcomes compared with non- Indigenous people. C...