Journal article
Unmet needs in immigrant cancer survivors: A cross-sectional population-based study
PN Butow, ML Bell, LJ Aldridge, M Sze, M Eisenbruch, M Jefford, P Schofield, A Girgis, M King, PS Duggal, J McGrane, D Goldstein
Supportive Care in Cancer | SPRINGER | Published : 2013
Abstract
Purpose: Social suffering, language difficulties, and cultural factors may all make the cancer experience more difficult for immigrants. This study aimed to document unmet needs, and variables associated with these, in a population-based sample of first-generation immigrants and Anglo-Australians who had survived cancer. Methods: Participants were recruited via Australian cancer registries. Eligible cancer survivors had a new diagnosis 1-6 years earlier and were aged between 18 and 80 years at diagnosis. Eligible immigrant participants and parents were born in a country where Arabic, Chinese (Mandarin, Cantonese, and other dialects), or Greek is spoken, and they spoke one of these languages...
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Government
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was funded by a grant from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (#457432), beyondblue: the national depression initiative, and the Victorian Community Foundation-James & Vera Lawson Trust (managed by ANZ trustees). Professor Butow holds a NHMRC Senior Principal research fellowship, and A/Prof Schofield holds a NHMRC career development fellowship (CDA level 2).