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Jennifer Wenzel

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University

Publications -  76
Citations -  2510

Jennifer Wenzel is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Health care. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 70 publications receiving 1919 citations. Previous affiliations of Jennifer Wenzel include Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine & University of Virginia.

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Effects and moderators of exercise on quality of life and physical function in patients with cancer : An individual patient data meta-analysis of 34 RCTs

Laurien M. Buffart, +47 more
TL;DR: In conclusion, exercise, and particularly supervised exercise, effectively improves QoL and PF in patients with cancer with different demographic and clinical characteristics during and following treatment.
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Uptake Rates for Breast Cancer Genetic Testing: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: In addition to clinical characteristics, research methodologic issues are likely to be major determinants of variability in published breast cancer genetic testing uptake rates, and an understanding of these issues will clarify to clinicians why their clinical experience may not be congruent with published rates and help guide future research.
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Perspectives on barriers and facilitators to minority recruitment for clinical trials among cancer center leaders, investigators, research staff, and referring clinicians: enhancing minority participation in clinical trials (EMPaCT).

TL;DR: In this article, the authors assessed the perspectives of cancer center clinical and research personnel on barriers and facilitators to minority recruitment and found that potential minority participants often face multilevel barriers that preclude them from being offered an opportunity to participate in a clinical trial, facilitators at both the institutional and participant level potentially encourage minority recruitment, and variation between internal and external referral procedures may limit clinical trial opportunities for racial and ethnic minorities.
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Working Through Grief and Loss: Oncology Nurses' Perspectives on Professional Bereavement

TL;DR: Administrators, managers, and individuals interested in furthering the multifaceted goals of oncology care, including nurses themselves, are challenged to create and maintain mutually supportive environments for providing optimal care to patients and families.