D
Donald Maxwell Parkin
Researcher at University of Oxford
Publications - 267
Citations - 74295
Donald Maxwell Parkin is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Population. The author has an hindex of 87, co-authored 259 publications receiving 71469 citations. Previous affiliations of Donald Maxwell Parkin include University of California, Los Angeles & Queen Mary University of London.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Development of paediatric non-stage prognosticator guidelines for population-based cancer registries and updates to the 2014 Toronto Paediatric Cancer Stage Guidelines
Sumit Gupta,Joanne F. Aitken,Ute Bartels,Nickhill Bhakta,Mihaela Bucurenci,James D. Brierley,Beatriz de Camargo,Eric Chokunonga,Jessica Clymer,Dana Coza,Chris Fraser,Soad Fuentes-Alabi,Gemma Gatta,Thomas G. Gross,Zsuzsanna Jakab,Betsy A. Kohler,Tezer Kutluk,Florencia Moreno,Kayo Nakata,Sari Nur,Donald Maxwell Parkin,Donald Maxwell Parkin,Lynne Penberthy,Jason D. Pole,Jenny N. Poynter,Kathy Pritchard-Jones,Oscar Ramirez,Lorna Renner,Eva Steliarova-Foucher,Michael J. Sullivan,Rajaraman Swaminathan,Liesbet Van Eycken,Tushar Vora,A. L. Frazier +33 more
TL;DR: Wide adoption of the resultant Paediatric NSP Guidelines and updated Toronto Stage Guidelines will enhance the harmonisation and use of childhood cancer data provided by PBCRs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer incidence in Northern Uganda (2013-2016).
TL;DR: The figures suggest a rather different pattern from that observed in the metropolitan population of Kampala, where there has been a cancer registry since 1951, to provide a more complete picture of the national cancer profile, permitting more targeted interventions in prevention, early detection and treatment services.
Journal Article
Changes in diet and changes in cancer risk: observational studies.
Donald Maxwell Parkin,Coleman Mp +1 more
Journal Article
Consistency of cytology diagnosis for cervical cancer between two laboratories.
Supannee Sriamporn,Onanong Kritpetcharat,Pekka Nieminen,Krittika Suwanrungraung,Supot Kamsa-ard,Donald Maxwell Parkin +5 more
TL;DR: The reproducibility of cervical cytology evaluations is critical to the success of screening programmes, and in this programme in a moderate-high risk population of women in rural Thailand, it is found that agreement between skilled observers, at the level of tests requiring diagnostic follow-up or not, was only moderate.