C
Carol Dingee
Researcher at University of British Columbia
Publications - 28
Citations - 537
Carol Dingee is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 23 publications receiving 437 citations. Previous affiliations of Carol Dingee include St. Joseph Hospital & Providence Health Care.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Chronic Arm Morbidity After Curative Breast Cancer Treatment: Prevalence and Impact on Quality of Life
TL;DR: Treatment for breast cancer is associated with considerable arm morbidity, which has a negative impact on QOL, andArm morbidity should be carefully monitored in future studies involving local treatment modalities for Breast cancer.
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Prospective surveillance and targeted physiotherapy for arm morbidity after breast cancer surgery: a pilot randomized controlled trial:
Bolette S. Rafn,Stanley Hung,Alison M. Hoens,Margaret L. McNeely,Chiara A Singh,Winkle Kwan,Carol Dingee,Elaine McKevitt,Urve Kuusk,Jin-Si Pao,Nancy Van Laeken,Charles H. Goldsmith,Charles H. Goldsmith,Kristin L. Campbell +13 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that PSTP is feasible among women with breast cancer for early identification of arm morbidity and the cost of the PSTP program was described.
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Axillary reverse mapping in breast cancer: a Canadian experience.
TL;DR: The aim of this study was to evaluate the axillary reverse lymphatic mapping procedure for reducing the risk of arm lymphedema after breast cancer surgery.
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COVID-19 and breast cancer at a Regional Breast Centre: our flexible approach during the pandemic.
Lina Cadili,Kristin DeGirolamo,Elaine McKevitt,Elaine McKevitt,Carl J. Brown,Christopher Prabhakar,Christopher Prabhakar,Jin-Si Pao,Jin-Si Pao,Carol Dingee,Carol Dingee,Amy Bazzarelli,Amy Bazzarelli,Rebecca Warburton,Rebecca Warburton +14 more
TL;DR: Changes such as improved access to telemedicine, timing for cancer surgeries, and safer anesthetic techniques in response to the pandemic will change breast cancer surgical care beyond thePandemic era.
Journal ArticleDOI
Phyllodes tumours of the breast: Outcomes and recurrence after excision.
Betty Wen,Betty Wen,Dorsa Mousadoust,Dorsa Mousadoust,Rebecca Warburton,Rebecca Warburton,Jin-Si Pao,Jin-Si Pao,Carol Dingee,Carol Dingee,Leo Chen,Elaine McKevitt,Elaine McKevitt +12 more
TL;DR: Treatment outcomes for phyllodes tumours patients treated between 2008 and 2017 were evaluated and predictors of recurrence were examined, finding wide excision and re-excising positive margins for benign tumours was not beneficial.