Results 101 to 110 of about 245,639 (349)
Temporal trends in incidence and mortality of colorectal cancer in Denmark from 2007 to 2022
What's New? Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in the Western world. Widespread use of screening programs has helped raise awareness of the disease and improve survival rates. To make sure screening, treatment, research, and education goals stay relevant, it is important to collect accurate population‐based estimates of CRC ...
Ida Ravnsbæk Johannsen+3 more
wiley +1 more source
Chemorepulsion and thymocyte emigration [PDF]
The possibility that chemorepulsion, or cell migration away from a stimulus, plays a role in the immune system is exciting from both clinical and cell-biological viewpoints. For the clinician, what could be a more satisfying way to treat a cell-mediated immune disease than local application of a chemorepellent?
openaire +3 more sources
What's New? Fecal immunochemical test (FIT) screening is increasingly common as a population‐based screening tool for colorectal cancer (CRC). If the follow‐up colonoscopy after a positive FIT detects only low‐risk adenomas, those participants are recommended to continue biennial screenings, the same as people with negative FIT results.
Pernille Thordal Larsen+4 more
wiley +1 more source
In the literature on migration, as well as in social policies regarding this phenomenon, the situation of returning emigrants receives scant attention.
Anna Aluffi Pentini, Fabio Olivieri
doaj
Emigration of Skilled Labor under Risk Aversion: The Case of Medical Doctors from Middle Eastern and North African Economies [PDF]
This is a contribution to the new economics of skilled labor emigration that focuses on the mobility of medical doctors from sending Middle East and North African countries. Economic models under risk neutrality and aversion are used.
Driouchi, Ahmed, Kadiri, Molk
core +1 more source
Sex specific familial risk in lung cancer through changing histologies in Sweden
What's New? Lung cancer is a complex disease arising from genetic and environmental factors. In this study, using data from family and cancer registries in Sweden, the authors investigated familial risks in lung cancer, with focus on sex‐ and time‐related changes and correlations with histology.
Kari Hemminki+5 more
wiley +1 more source
What's New? Chemotherapy is known to be more effective in females than in males. Based on known sex differences in the immune system, researchers have similarly suggested that there may be sex‐based differences in the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).
Kaitlyn M. Tsuruda+3 more
wiley +1 more source
Internal Migration and Income Inequality in China: Evidence from Village Panel Data [PDF]
Existing studies on the impact of migration on income inequality at sending communities suffer from severe methodology defects and data limitations. This paper analyzes the impact of rural-to-urban migration on inequality using a newly constructed panel ...
Ha, Wei, Yi, Junjian, Zhang, Junsen
core +1 more source
What's New? About half of penile squamous cell carcinomas are causally associated with inflammatory conditions such as lichen sclerosus (LSc), but few large‐scale studies have assessed the risk of penile cancer in men with LSc. Here, the authors conducted a large nationwide study in Denmark to estimate the risk of penile and non‐penile cancer in men ...
Marianne Gardar Stærk+5 more
wiley +1 more source
«E continuam a partir»: as migrações portuguesas contemporâneas
The present article analyses the migratory flows that have developed after the announced ‘end of Portuguese emigration’. It is argued that despite a political discourse and a research practice that tended to manifest a clear disinterest in the outflow of
José Carlos Marques
doaj +1 more source