© 2004 by Oxford University Press
© 2004 Oxford University Press
IN THIS ISSUE |
In This Issue
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Work Situation After Breast Cancer
It is unclear whether a breast cancer diagnosis adversely affects work
experience. Maunsell et al. (p.
1813) looked for evidence of discrimination at work, defined as
negative or involuntary changes in employment situation, associated with
breast cancer in a population-based retrospective cohort study conducted in
Quebec, Canada. Three years after being diagnosed, slightly more breast cancer
survivors (21%) than women in the comparison group (15%) were unemployed,
although most women who were not working (84% of survivors and 76% of women in
the comparison group) said that the decision to stop working was
Mammography Interval and Late-Stage Breast Cancer
Long-Term Results From Three Breast Cancer Trials
Accuracy of Screening Mammography Interpretation
Cigarettes, Alcohol, Hepatitis B, and Liver Cancer in Korea
Endogenous Steroid Hormones and Tumor Receptor Status