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Kerry S. Courneya
Researcher at University of Alberta
Publications - 638
Citations - 55786
Kerry S. Courneya is an academic researcher from University of Alberta. The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 112, co-authored 608 publications receiving 49504 citations. Previous affiliations of Kerry S. Courneya include American Cancer Society & Dalhousie University.
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Alberta diabetes and physical activity trial [ADAPT]
Ronald C. Plotnikoff,Nandini Karunamuni,Kerry S. Courneya,Ronald J. Sigal,Jeffrey A. Johnson,Nick Birkett,David C.W. Lau,Kim D. Raine +7 more
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Investigating relationships between ancestry, lifestyle behaviors and perceptions of heart disease and breast cancer among Canadian women with British and with South Asian ancestry.
Kimberley D. Curtin,Tanya R. Berry,Kerry S. Courneya,Kerry R. McGannon,Colleen M. Norris,Wendy M. Rodgers,John C. Spence +6 more
TL;DR: Relationships between perceptions of heart disease and breast cancer, and lifestyle behaviors for Canadian women with British and with South Asian ancestry are examined to examine the relationships between lifestyle behaviors and disease perceptions.
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User-centered development of a smartphone application (Fit2Thrive) to promote physical activity in breast cancer survivors.
Whitney A. Welch,Payton Solk,Lisa Auster-Gussman,Kara L. Gavin,Madelyn Whitaker,Erin Cullather,Emily Izenman,Kerry S. Courneya,Ronald T. Ackermann,Bonnie Spring,David Cella,Frank J. Penedo,Siobhan M. Phillips +12 more
TL;DR: Fit2Thrive as mentioned in this paper is a mobile application to promote moderate and vigorous physical activity (MVPA) for breast cancer survivors, which has high scalability potential, but few evidence-based apps exist.
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Extreme sport/adventure activity correlates in gynecologic cancer survivors
TL;DR: It is suggested that gynecologic cancer survivors are more likely to participate in ESSA if they have the physical capability and financial resources and Interventions to promote ESAA in gynecological cancer survivors need to address these 2 key barriers.