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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13. Cancers attributable to solar (ultraviolet) radiation exposure in the UK in 2010.
TL;DR: Cancers attributable to solar (ultraviolet) radiation exposure in the UK in 2010 and the number of people diagnosed with cancer and the types of cancers diagnosed are revealed are revealed.
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Test characteristics of visual inspection with 4% acetic acid (VIA) and Lugol's iodine (VILI) in cervical cancer screening in Kerala, India.
Rengaswamy Sankaranarayanan,Ramani S Wesley,Somanathan Thara,Namrata Dhakad,B. Chandralekha,P Sebastian,K. Chithrathara,Donald Maxwell Parkin,M.K. Nair +8 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that VIA and VILI are suitable alternate screening tests to cytology for detecting cervical neoplasia in low‐resource settings.
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The global burden of cancer
TL;DR: There are very large differences in the relative importance of the different cancers by world area; some of the factors, environmental and genetic, underlying the geographic distributions, are discussed.
Journal Article
Cholangiocarcinoma: epidemiology, mechanisms of carcinogenesis and prevention.
TL;DR: Preventive strategies in areas endemic for liver flukes appear straightforward, but breaking the cycle of infection has proved difficult in practice.
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Outcome of screening by clinical examination of the breast in a trial in the Philippines
Paola Pisani,Donald Maxwell Parkin,Corazon A. Ngelangel,Divina B. Esteban,Lorna Gibson,Lorna Gibson,Marilou Munson,Mary Grace Reyes,Adriano V. Laudico +8 more
TL;DR: Although CBE undertaken by health workers seems to offer a cost‐effective approach to reducing mortality, the sensitivity of the screening programme in the real context was low and screen‐detected cases were non‐significantly less advanced than the others.