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Anne M. Stiggelbout

Researcher at Leiden University Medical Center

Publications -  330
Citations -  17621

Anne M. Stiggelbout is an academic researcher from Leiden University Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 294 publications receiving 15419 citations. Previous affiliations of Anne M. Stiggelbout include Netherlands Cancer Institute & Leiden University.

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Cervical cancer survivors’ and partners’ experiences with sexual dysfunction and psychosexual support

TL;DR: Assessment of experiences with sexual dysfunctions, psychosexual support, and psychosexual healthcare needs among cervical cancer survivors (CCSs) and their partners found that offering more practical and reassuring information about sexuality after cervical cancer would be valuable for both CCSs and their partner.
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Shared decision making, a buzz-word in the Netherlands, the pace quickens towards nationwide implementation…

TL;DR: The culture shift in the minds and hearts of patients and clinicians has started but is still ongoing, and enthusiasm for shared decision making could be undermined if SDM is defined and implemented in a simplistic, dogmatic manner leading to irresponsible transferring of the professionals' uncertainty, responsibility, and decisional stress to patients.
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Benefit from preoperative radiotherapy in rectal cancer treatment: disease-free patients' and oncologists' preferences.

TL;DR: Assessment of what benefit oncologists and rectal cancer patients prefer PRT followed by surgery to surgery alone, and how oncologist and patients value various treatment outcomes found large differences in treatment preferences exist.
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A whisper-game perspective on the family communication of DNA-test results: a retrospective study on the communication process of BRCA1/2-test results between proband and relatives

TL;DR: Differences and low correlations suggested few similarities between the actually communicated information, the probands’ and the relatives’ perception, and more attention is required for how probands disseminate information to relatives.
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Quality of Life in 807 Patients with Vestibular Schwannoma: Comparing Treatment Modalities.

TL;DR: It is suggested that patients with small vestibular schwannomas experience better quality of life when managed with observation than do patients who have undergone active treatment.