In the 1960s, stories of children fighting cancer, previously absent from the British news, started to feature ever more prominently in the national press. Conventional treatments could not keep children alive for many months, so the promise of a cure through the use of an alternative anti-cancer ‘serum’ was not easily dismissed as quackery. The Ministry of Health and cancer research organisations struggled to find a fair and honest way to inform the public and affected families about childhood leukaemia without raising or crushing hope
Cancer is relatively rare in childhood, but it contributes considerably to childhood mortality, year...
Increasing time trends in the recorded incidence of childhood cancer have been reported in many diff...
The illness we call cancer has extraordinarily diverse features including its causation, underlying ...
In the 1960s, stories of children fighting cancer, previously absent from the British news, started ...
We provide evidence of a gradual increase in the incidence of childhood leukaemia over the twentieth...
Childhood cancer ranks high among public concerns, evoking the public’s fear of cancer as well as th...
This special issue of the European Journal of Cancer (EJC) comprises a set of 16 papers which analys...
Survival from childhood leukaemia has increased, but the proportion of children cured is unknown. Th...
Increasing time trends in the recorded incidence of childhood cancer have been reported in many diff...
SUMMARY In a population based series of 4070 children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia treated in ...
Summary. This article explores the early history of cancer education in Britain, focusing on the per...
OBJECTIVE: To assess recruitment of children to national clinical trials for acute lymphoblastic leu...
The Youngest Cancer Patients Meeting the Rising Demand for Outpatient Care House Call: Going Beyond ...
BACKGROUND: Completeness of ascertainment is a very important aspect of cancer registration. There i...
To access publisher's full text version of this article click on the hyperlink belowBACKGROUND: Sur...
Cancer is relatively rare in childhood, but it contributes considerably to childhood mortality, year...
Increasing time trends in the recorded incidence of childhood cancer have been reported in many diff...
The illness we call cancer has extraordinarily diverse features including its causation, underlying ...
In the 1960s, stories of children fighting cancer, previously absent from the British news, started ...
We provide evidence of a gradual increase in the incidence of childhood leukaemia over the twentieth...
Childhood cancer ranks high among public concerns, evoking the public’s fear of cancer as well as th...
This special issue of the European Journal of Cancer (EJC) comprises a set of 16 papers which analys...
Survival from childhood leukaemia has increased, but the proportion of children cured is unknown. Th...
Increasing time trends in the recorded incidence of childhood cancer have been reported in many diff...
SUMMARY In a population based series of 4070 children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia treated in ...
Summary. This article explores the early history of cancer education in Britain, focusing on the per...
OBJECTIVE: To assess recruitment of children to national clinical trials for acute lymphoblastic leu...
The Youngest Cancer Patients Meeting the Rising Demand for Outpatient Care House Call: Going Beyond ...
BACKGROUND: Completeness of ascertainment is a very important aspect of cancer registration. There i...
To access publisher's full text version of this article click on the hyperlink belowBACKGROUND: Sur...
Cancer is relatively rare in childhood, but it contributes considerably to childhood mortality, year...
Increasing time trends in the recorded incidence of childhood cancer have been reported in many diff...
The illness we call cancer has extraordinarily diverse features including its causation, underlying ...