O
Oxana Palesh
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 140
Citations - 8895
Oxana Palesh is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 132 publications receiving 7156 citations. Previous affiliations of Oxana Palesh include University of Rochester & University of Salzburg.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sexual Revictimization A Review of the Empirical Literature
TL;DR: This article reviews the literature on sexual revictimization, covering approximately 90 empirical studies and includes a discussion of prevalence, risk factors, and correlates of sexual revictsimization.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer-Related Fatigue, Version 2.2015
Ann M. Berger,Kathi Mooney,Amy Alvarez-Perez,William Breitbart,Kristen M. Carpenter,David Cella,Charles S. Cleeland,Efrat Dotan,Mario A. Eisenberger,Carmen P. Escalante,Paul B. Jacobsen,Catherine M. Jankowski,Thomas W. LeBlanc,Jennifer A. Ligibel,Elizabeth T. Loggers,Belinda N. Mandrell,Barbara A. Murphy,Oxana Palesh,William F. Pirl,Steven C. Plaxe,Michelle Riba,Hope S. Rugo,Carolina Salvador,Lynne I. Wagner,Nina D. Wagner-Johnston,Finly Zachariah,Mary Anne Bergman,Courtney Smith +27 more
TL;DR: Fatigue is a frequently underreported complication in patients with cancer and, when reported, is responsible for reduced quality of life.
Journal ArticleDOI
Comparison of Pharmaceutical, Psychological, and Exercise Treatments for Cancer-Related Fatigue: A Meta-analysis
Karen M. Mustian,Catherine M. Alfano,Charles E. Heckler,Amber S. Kleckner,Ian R. Kleckner,Corinne R. Leach,David C. Mohr,Oxana Palesh,Luke J. Peppone,Barbara F. Piper,John Scarpato,Tenbroeck Smith,Lisa K. Sprod,Suzanne M. Miller +13 more
TL;DR: A meta-analysis to establish and compare the mean weighted effect sizes of the 4 most commonly recommended treatments for CRF—exercise, psychological, combined exercise and psychological, and pharmaceutical—and to identify independent variables associated with treatment effectiveness suggests Exercise and psychological interventions are effective for reducing CRF during and after cancer treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence, Demographics, and Psychological Associations of Sleep Disruption in Patients With Cancer: University of Rochester Cancer Center-Community Clinical Oncology Program
Oxana Palesh,Joseph A. Roscoe,Karen M. Mustian,Thomas Roth,Josée Savard,Sonia Ancoli-Israel,Charles E. Heckler,Jason Q. Purnell,Michelle C. Janelsins,Gary R. Morrow +9 more
TL;DR: The proportions of patients with cancer in this sample reporting symptoms of insomnia and meeting diagnostic criteria for insomnia syndrome during chemotherapy are approximately three times higher than the proportions reported in the general population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Distress management: Clinical practice guidelines in Oncology™
Jimmie C. Holland,Barbara L. Andersen,William Breitbart,Luke O. Buchmann,Bruce E. Compas,Teresa L. Deshields,Moreen M. Dudley,Stewart B. Fleishman,Caryl D. Fulcher,Donna B. Greenberg,Carl B. Greiner,Rev George F. Handzo,Laura Hoofring,Charles Hoover,Paul B. Jacobsen,Elizabeth Kvale,Michael H. Levy,Matthew Loscalzo,McAllister-Black Randi McAllister-Black,Karen Y. Mechanic,Oxana Palesh,Janice P. Pazar,Michelle Riba,Kristin Roper,Alan D. Valentine,Lynne I. Wagner,Michael A. Zevon,Nicole R. McMillian,Deborah A. Freedman-Cass +28 more
TL;DR: These NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology for Distress Management discuss the identifica tion and treatment of psychosocial problems in patients with cancer to assist oncology teams identify patients who require referral to psychossocial resources and to give oncological teams guidance on interventions for patients with mild distress.