1.Health economic evaluation of human papillomavirus vaccines in the developing countries: systematic reviews.
Xiaobin SONG ; Fanzhen MAO ; Zi ZHOU ; Qinjian ZHAO ; Ya FANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2016;50(1):85-90
Cervical carcinoma has brought huge burden on patients, especially in developing countries. Preventive vaccines could effectively reduce the incidence of cervical carcinoma. The high prices were one of the most difficult problem in introducing the vaccine in developing countries, so the cost-effectiveness and health financing of the vaccines should be carefully studied before incorporated into the national immunization program. Thus, researchers used mathematical models to predict the effects of HPV vaccines and to study the cost- effectiveness. In order to understand the current situation on the cost-effectiveness of HPV vaccines in the developing countries, a systematic searching of literature from PubMed, Elsevier Science Direct, Medline, ProQuest, CNKI and Wangfang Data was performed, this study aims to conduct a systematic review from aspects of project source, first author, research areas, research perspectives, prevention strategies, vaccine characteristics, cost-effectiveness.
Cost-Benefit Analysis
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Developing Countries
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Female
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Humans
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Immunization Programs
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Incidence
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Models, Theoretical
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Papillomavirus Infections
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economics
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prevention & control
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Papillomavirus Vaccines
;
economics
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Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
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economics
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prevention & control
2.Smartphone Application WeChat for Clinical Follow-up of Discharged Patients with Head and Neck Tumors: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Ke-Xing LYU ; Jing ZHAO ; Bin WANG ; Guan-Xia XIONG ; Wei-Qiang YANG ; Qi-Hong LIU ; Xiao-Lin ZHU ; Wei SUN ; Ai-Yun JIANG ; Wei-Ping WEN ; Wen-Bin LEI
Chinese Medical Journal 2016;129(23):2816-2823
BACKGROUNDNowadays, social media tools such as short message service, Twitter, video, and web-based systems are more and more used in clinical follow-up, making clinical follow-up much more time- and cost-effective than ever before. However, as the most popular social media in China, little is known about the utility of smartphone WeChat application in follow-up. In this study, we aimed to investigate the feasibility and superiority of WeChat application in clinical follow-up.
METHODSA total of 108 patients diagnosed with head and neck tumor were randomized to WeChat follow-up (WFU) group or telephone follow-up (TFU) group for 6-month follow-up. The follow-ups were delivered by WeChat or telephone at 2 weeks, 1, 2, 3, and 6 months to the patients after being discharged. The study measurements were time consumption for follow-up delivery, total economic cost, lost-to-follow-up rate, and overall satisfaction for the follow-up method.
RESULTSTime consumption in WFU group for each patient (23.36 ± 6.16 min) was significantly shorter than that in TFU group (42.89 ± 7.15 min) (P < 0.001); total economic cost in WFU group (RMB 90 Yuan) was much lower than that in TFU group (RMB 196 Yuan). Lost-to-follow-up rate in the WFU group was 7.02% (4/57) compared with TFU group, 9.80% (5/51), while no significance was observed (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.176-2.740; P = 0.732). The overall satisfaction rate in WFU group was 94.34% (50/53) compared with 80.43% (37/46) in TFU group (95% CI: 0.057-0.067; P = 0.034).
CONCLUSIONSThe smartphone WeChat application was found to be a viable option for follow-up in discharged patients with head and neck tumors. WFU was time-effective, cost-effective, and convenient in communication. This doctor-led follow-up model has the potential to establish a good physician-patient relationship by enhancing dynamic communications and providing individual health instructions.
TRIAL REGISTRATIONChinese Clinical Trial Registry, ChiCTR-IOR-15007498; http://www.chictr.org.cn/ showproj.aspx?proj=12613.
Adult ; Aftercare ; economics ; methods ; Aged ; Female ; Head and Neck Neoplasms ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Patient Discharge ; economics ; statistics & numerical data ; Smartphone ; Social Media ; Telephone ; Young Adult
3.Disease burden of colorectal cancer in Jinchang cohort.
Sheng CHANG ; Yana BAI ; Hongquan PU ; Ni LI ; Ning CHENG ; Haiyan LI ; Zhidong XIE ; Fuxin LI ; Xiaobin HU ; Jinbing ZHU ; Jie HE ; Min DAI
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2016;37(3):325-328
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the disease burden of colorectal cancer in Jinchang cohort, and provide evidence for preventing colorectal cancer and reducing the disease burden of colorectal cancer in the cohort.
METHODSThe colorectal cancer mortality data from 2001 to 2013 and the medical records of colorectal cancer patients from 2001 to 2010 were collected for this retrospective cohort study. The colorectal cancer disease burden was described by using mortality rate, standardized mortality rate, medical expenditure, potential years of life lost (PYLL), average potential years of life lost (APYLL), working potential years of life lost (WPYLL), and average working potential years of life lost (AWPYLL). The development trend in disease burden of colorectal cancer was analyzed by using Spearman correlation and the average growth rate.
RESULTSThe crude mortality rate of colorectal cancer from 2001 to 2013 was 9.53/100,000 with the average annual growth rate of 12.89%. The PYLL, APYLL, WPYLL and AWPYLL of colorectal cancer were 485.00 person-years, 9.15 years, 253.00 person-years, and 4.77 years, respectively. The direct medical expenditure due to colorectal cancer was 7064.38 Yuan per case and 408.43 Yuan per day. There was no increasing trend in the direct medical expenditure due to colorectal cancer.
CONCLUSIONColorectal cancer mortolity rate was on the rise and it caused heavy disease burden in Jinchang cohort.
China ; epidemiology ; Colorectal Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Cost of Illness ; Health Expenditures ; statistics & numerical data ; Humans ; Retrospective Studies
4.Disease burden of liver cancer in Jinchang cohort.
Xiaobin HU ; Yana BAI ; Hongquan PU ; Kai ZHANG ; Ning CHENG ; Haiyan LI ; Xiping SHEN ; Fuxiu LI ; Xiaowei REN ; Jinbing ZHU ; Shan ZHENG ; Minzhen WANG ; Min DAI
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2016;37(3):321-324
OBJECTIVETo understand the current status of the disease burden of liver cancer in Jinchang cohort.
METHODSAll the liver cancer death data from 2001 to 2013 and medical records of liver cancer cases from 2001 to 2010 in Jinchang cohort were collected for the analyses of the mortality, standardized mortality, potential years of life lost (PYLL) and working PYLL (WPYLL) associated with liver cancer. Spearman correlation and the average growth rate were used to analyze the trends.
RESULTSA total of 207 liver cancer deaths occurred in Jinchang cohort from 2001 to 2013, accounting for 16.68% of total cancer deaths. There were 259 liver cancer inpatients, accounting for 6.79% of the total cancer cases inpatients, in which 83 died (32.05%). Liver cancer death mainly occurred in males, accounting for 88.89%, and the liver cancer deaths in females accounted for 11.11%. The standardized mortality rate was 42.32/100,000 in males and 15.31/100,000 in females. The growth rate of liver cancer mortality was 5.62% from 2001 to 2013. Liver cancer deaths mainly occurred in age groups 60-69 years (26.57%) and 50-59 years (24.15%). The PYLL was 2906.76 person-years, the average PYLL was 14.04 years. The WPYLL was 1477.00 person-years and the average WPYLL was 7.14 years. The direct economic burden of liver cancer was 6270.78 Yuan per person, 301.75 Yuan per day. The average stay of hospitalization was 21.32 days.
CONCLUSIONThe mortality rate of liver cancer is increasing and the disease burden is still heavy.
Aged ; China ; epidemiology ; Cohort Studies ; Cost of Illness ; Female ; Hospitalization ; economics ; statistics & numerical data ; Humans ; Liver Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Male ; Middle Aged
5.Disease burden of gastric cancer in Jinchang cohort.
Hongbo PEI ; Hongquan PU ; Min DAI ; Yana BAI ; Sheng CHANG ; Zhengfang WANG ; Ning CHENG ; Haiyan LI ; Juansheng LI ; Xiaobin HU ; Xiaowei REN
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2016;37(3):316-320
OBJECTIVETo understand the current status of disease burden caused by gastric cancer in Jinchang cohort.
METHODSIn this historical cohort study, the data of gastric cancer deaths from 2001 to 2013 and the medical records of gastric cancer cases from 2001 to 2010 in Jinchang cohort were collected to analyze the mortality, potential years of life lost (PYLL), working PYLL (WPYLL) associated with gastric cancer, and the medical expenditure data were used to evaluate the direct economic burden. Spearman correlation analysis and the average growth rate were used to describe the change trend of disease burden of gastric cancer.
RESULTSA total of 213 gastric cancer deaths occurred in Jinchang cohort from 2001 to 2013. The average annual crude mortality rate of gastric cancer was 38.30 per 100,000 in Jinchang cohort during 2001-2013 and no obvious change was observed. The crude mortality rate in males was 6.84 times higher than that in females. Gastric cancer death mainly occurred in age group 50-79 years (82.62%), while the mortality rates was increasing among the people under 50 years with an average annual increase rate of 0.77%. The annual average PYLL (APYLL) and average WPYLL (AWPYLL) caused by gastric cancer decreased by 8.43% and 10.46%, respectively. No obvious change in medical expenditure of gastric cancer cases was observed in Jinchang Cohort during 2001-2010, and the medical expenditure and average daily cost of hospitalization were 8102.23 Yuan, and 463.45 Yuan per capita, respectively.
CONCLUSIONSThe burden of disease for gastric cancer was heavy in Jinchang cohort. The PYLL and WPYLL had no change, while the APYLL and AWPYLL showed a increasing trend during the last ten years. Direct economic burden of inpatients with gastric cancer had no change.
Aged ; China ; epidemiology ; Cohort Studies ; Cost of Illness ; Female ; Health Expenditures ; statistics & numerical data ; Hospitalization ; economics ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Stomach Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality
6.Disease burden of lung cancer in Jinchang cohort.
Shan ZHENG ; Hongquan PU ; Min DAI ; Yana BAI ; Haiyan LI ; Sheng CHANG ; Minzhen WANG ; Zhengfang WANG ; Jinbing ZHU ; Xiaowei REN ; Juansheng LI ; Ning CHENG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2016;37(3):311-315
OBJECTIVETo understand the current status of lung cancer disease burden in Jinchang cohort.
METHODSIn this historical cohort study, the mortality data of the lung cancer from 2001 to 2013 and medical records of the lung cancer cases from 2001 to 2010 in Jinchang cohort were used, analyze mortality, direct economic burden, potential years of life lost (PYLL) and working PYLL (WPYLL) associated with lung cancer.
RESULTSA total of 434 lung cancer deaths occurred in Jinchang cohort from 2001 to 2013. The crude mortality rate of lung cancer was 78.06 per 100,000 from 2001 to 2013, with the increasing rate of 4.77%. The mortality rate of lung cancer in males and females were about 108.90 per 100,000 and 26.08 per 100,000 with the increasing rate of 4.24% and 6.91%, respectively. During the thirteen years, the PYLL and average PYLL (APYLL) of lung cancer were 3 721.71 person-years and 8.58 years. The APYLL of lung cancer in females (15.94 years) was higher than that in males (7.87 years). The WPYLL and the average WPYLL (AWPYLL) of lung cancer were 1161.00 person-years and 2.68 years, respectively. The AWPYLL of lung cancer was also higher in females than in males. The direct economic burden of lung cancer from 2001 to 2010 in Jinchang cohort was 6309.39 Yuan per case with no increased trend.
CONCLUSIONLung cancer is the main health problem in Jinchang cohort, causing heavy disease burden.
China ; epidemiology ; Cohort Studies ; Cost of Illness ; Female ; Humans ; Lung Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Male
7.Cancer burden in the Jinchang cohort.
Yana BAI ; Hongmei QU ; Hongquan PU ; Min DAI ; Ning CHENG ; Haiyan LI ; Sheng CHANG ; Juansheng LI ; Feng KANG ; Xiaobin HU ; Xiaowei REN ; Jie HE
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2016;37(3):306-310
OBJECTIVETo understand the disease burden caused by cancers in Jinchang cohort, and develop effective strategies for cancer prevention and control in this population.
METHODSThe cancer mortality data from 2001 to 2013 and the medical records for cancer patients from 2001 to 2010 in Jinchang cohort were collected. The disease burden caused by cancer was analyzed by using mortality rate, potential years of life lost (PYLL), working PYLL (WPYLL), and direct economic burden.
RESULTSDuring 2001-2013, in Jinchang cohort, the five leading cancers ranked by mortality rate were lung cancer (78.06/100,000), gastric cancer (38.03/100,000), liver cancer (37.23/100,000), esophageal cancer (19.06/100,000), and colorectal cancer (9.53/100,000). The five leading cancers in terms of PYLL (person-years) and WPYLL (person-years) were lung cancer (3480.33, 1161.00), liver cancer (2809.03, 1475.00), gastric cancer (2120.54, 844.00), esophageal cancer (949.61, 315.00), and colorectal cancer (539.90, 246.00). From 2001 to 2010, the five leading cancers in term of average daily cost of hospitalization were gastric cancer (8,102.23 Yuan), esophageal cancer (7135.79 Yuan), colorectal cancer (7064.38 Yuan), breast cancer (6723.53 Yuan), and lung cancer (6309.39 Yuan).
CONCLUSIONSThe cancers common causing higher disease burden in Jinchang cohort were lung cancer, gastric cancer, liver cancer, esophageal cancer and colorectal cancer. The lung cancer disease burden was the highest.
Breast Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; China ; epidemiology ; Cohort Studies ; Colorectal Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Cost of Illness ; Esophageal Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Female ; Hospitalization ; economics ; Humans ; Liver Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Lung Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Male ; Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality ; Stomach Neoplasms ; economics ; mortality
8.Drainless Parotidectomies versus Conventional Parotidectomies: Randomised Control Study on Efficacy and Safety.
Dennis Yk CHUA ; Christopher Hk GOH
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2016;45(11):513-515
Adenolymphoma
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surgery
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Adenoma, Pleomorphic
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surgery
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Compression Bandages
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Drainage
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Facial Nerve Diseases
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epidemiology
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Female
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Fibrin Tissue Adhesive
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therapeutic use
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Health Care Costs
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Hospitalization
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economics
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statistics & numerical data
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Humans
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Length of Stay
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Parotid Gland
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surgery
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Parotid Neoplasms
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surgery
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Postoperative Complications
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epidemiology
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Singapore
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epidemiology
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Tissue Adhesives
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therapeutic use
9.Progress on clinical application of bevacizumab for the treatment of refractory cervical cancer.
Bin HE ; Yanlan CHAI ; Tao WANG ; Zhenxing ZHOU ; Zi LIU
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2016;45(4):395-402
Bevacizumab is increasingly used in recurrent, persistent or metastatic cervical cancer. The early retrospective case reports found that bevacizumab combined with 5-FU (including capecitabine) or paclitaxel was well tolerated and displayed encouraging anti-tumor activity in recurrent or persistent cervical cancer. Phase Ⅱ clinical trials showed that bevacizumab was well tolerated and active in the second- and third-line treatment of patients with recurrent cervical cancer. Large scale phase Ⅱ and phase Ⅲ clinical trials demonstrated that bevacizumab-containing chemotherapy was effective in the first- and second-line treatment of patients with persistent cervical cancer, prolonged survival time and improved remission rate. The article also reviews the research progress on predictive factors of bevacizumab efficacy, showing the use of imaging and biomarkers in predicting the efficacy of bevacizumab treatment. In addition, this article analyzes the cost-effectiveness of bevacizumab, finding that bevacizumab combined with chemotherapy meets the standard of cost-effectiveness.
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols
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economics
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therapeutic use
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Bevacizumab
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economics
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therapeutic use
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Cost-Benefit Analysis
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Female
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Fluorouracil
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economics
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therapeutic use
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Health Care Costs
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Humans
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Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
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drug therapy
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Paclitaxel
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economics
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therapeutic use
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Remission Induction
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Retrospective Studies
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Survival Rate
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Treatment Outcome
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Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
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drug therapy
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economics
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mortality
10.Current status of brachytherapy in Korea: a national survey of radiation oncologists.
Haeyoung KIM ; Joo Young KIM ; Juree KIM ; Won PARK ; Young Seok KIM ; Hak Jae KIM ; Yong Bae KIM
Journal of Gynecologic Oncology 2016;27(4):e33-
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to acquire information on brachytherapy resources in Korea through a national survey of radiation oncologists. METHODS: Between October 2014 and January 2015, a questionnaire on the current status of brachytherapy was distributed to all 86 radiation oncology departments in Korea. The questionnaire was divided into sections querying general information on human resources, brachytherapy equipment, and suggestions for future directions of brachytherapy policy in Korea. RESULTS: The response rate of the survey was 88.3%. The average number of radiation oncologists per center was 2.3. At the time of survey, 28 centers (36.8%) provided brachytherapy to patients. Among the 28 brachytherapy centers, 15 (53.5%) were located in in the capital Seoul and its surrounding metropolitan areas. All brachytherapy centers had a high-dose rate system using (192)Ir (26 centers) or (60)Co (two centers). Among the 26 centers using (192)Ir sources, 11 treated fewer than 40 patients per year. In the two centers using (60)Co sources, the number of patients per year was 16 and 120, respectively. The most frequently cited difficulties in performing brachytherapy were cost related. A total of 21 centers had a plan to sustain the current brachytherapy system, and four centers noted plans to upgrade their brachytherapy system. Two centers stated that they were considering discontinuation of brachytherapy due to cost burdens of radioisotope source replacement. CONCLUSION: The present study illustrated the current status of brachytherapy in Korea. Financial difficulties were the major barriers to the practice of brachytherapy.
*Brachytherapy/economics
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Humans
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Neoplasms/*radiotherapy
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*Oncologists
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Republic of Korea
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Surveys and Questionnaires

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