Penelope Schofield — ASN Events

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Presentations this author is a contributor to:

Inferior quality of life and psychological well-being in immigrant cancer survivors (#245)

4:00 PM
Phyllis N Butow
IPOS - A global perspective, culture and cancer experiences

After treatment: assessing the long-term psychosocial morbidity and its predictors in breast cancer survivors (#268)

10:00 AM
Yuan Tian
IPOS - Not an even playing field - Factors affecting adjustment of survivors

Patterns and predictors of psychological morbidity and quality of life in men with prostate cancer who receive curative radiotherapy. (#189)

11:45 AM
Rebecca Bergin
IPOS - Enhancing psychological outcomes - Community, consumer and health professional initiatives

Development of nurse training programs for psychosocial interventions:  differences between the research and clinical environments. (#223)

5:00 PM
Sibilah Breen
IPOS - Translating training into practice: Examining the process from training to implementation

After treatment: profile and predictors of long-term morbidity in breast cancer survivors (#816)

3:00 PM
Yuan Tian
COSA Posters: Translational Research

Discussing expensive anticancer drugs – a survey of the opinions of patients with advanced cancer (#708)

3:20 PM
Linda Mileshkin
COSA Best of the Best Posters: Epidemiology and Health Services

Improving the management of chemotherapy toxicities in haematological cancer patients: A phase II randomised controlled trial of the Patient Remote Intervention and Symptom Management System (PRISMS) (#737)

3:00 PM
Rose Kamateros
COSA Posters: Clinical Research

Intensive training methods for peer volunteers who deliver a complex, psychosocial intervention in a phase III trial: PeNTAGOn (#171)

11:00 AM
Penelope Schofield
IPOS Symposium - Exploring the role of peer support in psychosocial care: From research to practice

Can screening with the Distress Thermometer guide intervention and referral by nurses? (#234)

4:20 PM
Sanchia Aranda
IPOS - Screening for distress: A practical guide to what really works