Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 15
pro vyhledávání: '"M. S. O'Malley"'
Autor:
M S, O'Malley, N J, Shaheen, M A, Crosby, S C, Murray, J S, Klenzak, J A, Galanko, A, Singla, D F, Ransohoff, R S, Sandler, J, Gaither, E D, Paskett
Publikováno v:
North Carolina medical journal. 62(5)
Publikováno v:
American journal of preventive medicine. 13(6)
In December 1993 the National Cancer Institute (NCI) decided to replace its mammography screening guidelines with a Statement of Evidence on Breast Cancer Screening. The Statement of Evidence represented a departure from the institute's previous poli
Publikováno v:
North Carolina medical journal. 58(3)
Autor:
M S, O'Malley
Publikováno v:
American journal of preventive medicine. 9(3)
The cost-effectiveness of breast cancer screening that includes breast self-examination (BSE) has not been investigated, in part because the costs and effects of programs to teach BSE are not well known. I used data from a randomized, controlled tria
Autor:
R J, McKenna, P, Greene, D P, Winchester, C J, Baines, R S, Foster, V, Champion, M S, O'Malley
Publikováno v:
Cancer. 69
Publikováno v:
American journal of preventive medicine. 6(3)
Prompting physicians increases performance of preventive procedures, but the long-term effects of prompting, and of different types of prompting (manual versus computer), on various procedures is unclear. Nor has the effect of the optional enrollment
Autor:
M. S. O'Malley
Publikováno v:
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 257:2196-2203
Autor:
M S, O'Malley, S W, Fletcher
Publikováno v:
JAMA. 257(16)
We reviewed evidence regarding breast self-examination (BSE) and screening for breast cancer. To our knowledge, no controlled prospective trial links BSE to lives saved from breast cancer. Compared with clinical breast examination and mammography, th
Autor:
M S, O'Malley, S W, Fletcher
Publikováno v:
North Carolina medical journal. 48(10)
Publikováno v:
Archives of internal medicine. 144(2)
Subspecialists deliver a substantial proportion of primary care but little is known about how their training affects their attitudes toward this role. We surveyed a department of medicine to determine fellows' (N = 34) attitudes toward primary care a