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George K. H. Li

Researcher at Queen Mary University of London

Publications -  7
Citations -  449

George K. H. Li is an academic researcher from Queen Mary University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Quality of life. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications receiving 407 citations. Previous affiliations of George K. H. Li include Queen Mary Hospital.

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The symptom cluster of fatigue, pain, anxiety, and depression and the effect on the quality of life of women receiving treatment for breast cancer: a multicenter study.

TL;DR: The findings enhance nurses' clinical sensitivity when identifying patients in high-risk groups and provide useful information for designing and prioritizing symptom-management strategies to meet patients' needs.
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Anxiety, depression and quality of life among Chinese breast cancer patients during adjuvant therapy.

TL;DR: This study should increase nurses' awareness of the importance of integrating psychological symptom assessment into nursing assessment procedures, and enhance their clinical sensitivity in identifying high-risk groups of patients undergoing specific cancer treatments.
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Localization of hRad9 in breast cancer.

TL;DR: Finding of hyperphosphorylated forms of hRad9 in the nucleus of cancer cells is in keeping with its function in ameliorating DNA instability, whereby it inadvertently assists tumor growth.
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A γ-δ T cell lymphoma with a mask face.

TL;DR: A 55-year-old woman presented with 2 months ’ history of facial swelling and infl ammation and underwent bilateral lateral canthoplasty, tensor-fascia-lata sling oroplasty and facial fat graft with good functional and cosmetic results.
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Fatigue and quality of life of women undergoing chemotherapy or radiotherapy for breast cancer

TL;DR: The results of the study demonstrate that healthcare professionals should enhance healthcare professionals’ awareness of the importance of symptom assessment, and provide them with information for planning effective symptom-management strategies among this study population.