Now showing items 1-3 of 3

    • Colorectal Cancer Screening: Language is a Greater Barrier for Latino Men than Latino Women 

      Diaz, J. A.; Roberts, M. B.; Clarke, J. G.; Simmons, E. M.; Goldman, Roberta E.; Rakowski, W. (Springer Nature, 2012)
      Colorectal cancer screening (CRC) disparities between non-Latino Whites and Latinos remain, and may have increased. The goal of this analysis was to examine the association between Latino race/ethnicity, gender, and ...
    • Data on Medicare eligibility and cancer screening utilization 

      Meyer, Christian P.; Allard, Christopher B.; Sammon, Jesse D.; Hanske, Julian; McNabb-Baltar, Julia; Goldberg, Joel E.; Reznor, Gally; Lipsitz, Stuart R.; Choueiri, Toni K.; Nguyen, Paul L.; Weissman, Joel S.; Trinh, Quoc-Dien (Elsevier, 2016)
      Health insurance is associated with increased utilization of cancer screening services. Data on breast, prostate and colorectal cancer screening were abstracted from the 2012 Behavioral Risk Factor and Surveillance System. ...
    • Low-dose Arsenic induces chemotherapy protection via p53/NF-κB-mediated metabolic regulation 

      Ganapathy, Suthakar; Xiao, Shaowen; Seo, Seog-Jin; Lall, Rajuli; Yang, Mei; Xu, Teng; Su, Hang; Shadfan, Miriam; Ha, Chul S.; Yuan, Zhi-Min (2015)
      Most chemotherapeutical drugs kill cancer cells chiefly by inducing DNA damage, which unfortunately also causes undesirable injuries to normal tissues, mainly due to p53 activation. We report a novel strategy of normal ...