Breast cancer: views of general practitioners on its detection and treatment
Breast cancer: views of general practitioners on its detection and treatment
A considerable proportion of women with breast cancer in this country present for treatment in late stages of the disease; Britain's primary health-care system means that in most cases the possible diagnosis of breast cancer is first made in general practice. This offers ample opportunity for early diagnosis and a better understanding about the way the general practitioners perceive the problems associated with the disease. With that specific aim, the present article reports on a survey conducted simultaneously in Oxford and in Edinburgh. Results show that general practitioners in the survey are deeply concerned about breast cancer and see a definite role for themselves in its early detection and long-term management. They also see a need for more health education that includes the encourgement of breast self-examination programmes. Most are in favour of open-access breast clinics for women and, in general, they feel positive about self-education programmes.
250-254
Kalache, Alex
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Roberts, Maureen
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Stratton, Irene
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May 1984
Kalache, Alex
1c19163f-bcad-40f0-95fe-d8c728f471de
Roberts, Maureen
f02cb4c6-407a-4b9b-87ed-49b3b95dcd38
Stratton, Irene
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Kalache, Alex, Roberts, Maureen and Stratton, Irene
(1984)
Breast cancer: views of general practitioners on its detection and treatment.
Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners, 34 (262), .
Abstract
A considerable proportion of women with breast cancer in this country present for treatment in late stages of the disease; Britain's primary health-care system means that in most cases the possible diagnosis of breast cancer is first made in general practice. This offers ample opportunity for early diagnosis and a better understanding about the way the general practitioners perceive the problems associated with the disease. With that specific aim, the present article reports on a survey conducted simultaneously in Oxford and in Edinburgh. Results show that general practitioners in the survey are deeply concerned about breast cancer and see a definite role for themselves in its early detection and long-term management. They also see a need for more health education that includes the encourgement of breast self-examination programmes. Most are in favour of open-access breast clinics for women and, in general, they feel positive about self-education programmes.
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Published date: May 1984
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Local EPrints ID: 486876
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486876
ISSN: 0035-8797
PURE UUID: 36ce9de5-9bdd-4354-b1a5-0ef49e55f51d
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Date deposited: 08 Feb 2024 17:31
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:01
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Contributors
Author:
Alex Kalache
Author:
Maureen Roberts
Author:
Irene Stratton
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