P
Peter D. Baade
Researcher at Cancer Council Queensland
Publications - 350
Citations - 27080
Peter D. Baade is an academic researcher from Cancer Council Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 324 publications receiving 22411 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter D. Baade include Griffith University & Cancer Epidemiology Unit.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer statistics in China, 2015
Wanqing Chen,Rongshou Zheng,Peter D. Baade,Siwei Zhang,Hongmei Zeng,Freddie Bray,Ahmedin Jemal,Xue Qin Yu,Jie He +8 more
TL;DR: Many of the estimated cancer cases and deaths can be prevented through reducing the prevalence of risk factors, while increasing the effectiveness of clinical care delivery, particularly for those living in rural areas and in disadvantaged populations.
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Changing cancer survival in China during 2003–15: a pooled analysis of 17 population-based cancer registries
Hongmei Zeng,Wanqing Chen,Rongshou Zheng,Siwei Zhang,John S. Ji,Xiaonong Zou,Changfa Xia,Kexin Sun,Zhixun Yang,He Li,Ning Wang,Ren-Qiang Han,Shuzheng Liu,H.C. Li,Huijuan Mu,Yutong He,Yanjun Xu,Zhentao Fu,Yan Zhou,Jie Jiang,Yanlei Yang,Jianguo Chen,Kuangrong Wei,Dongmei Fan,Jian Wang,Fangxian Fu,Deli Zhao,Guohui Song,Jianshun Chen,Chunxiao Jiang,Xin Zhou,Xiaoping Gu,Feng Jin,Qilong Li,Yanhua Li,Tonghao Wu,Chunhua Yan,Jianmei Dong,Zhaolai Hua,Peter D. Baade,Freddie Bray,Ahmedin Jemal,Xue Qin Yu,Jie He +43 more
TL;DR: There was a marked overall increase in cancer survival from 2003 to 2015 in the population covered by these cancer registries in China, possibly reflecting advances in the quality of cancer care in these areas.
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The International Epidemiology of Lung Cancer Geographical Distribution and Secular Trends
TL;DR: Given the increasing incidence of lung cancer in less developed countries and the current lack of effective treatment for advanced lung cancers, these results highlight the need for ongoing global tobacco reform to reduce the international burden of Lung cancer.
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The descriptive epidemiology of female breast cancer: an international comparison of screening, incidence, survival and mortality
TL;DR: The future worldwide breast cancer burden will be strongly influenced by large predicted rises in incidence throughout parts of Asia due to an increasingly "westernised" lifestyle.
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Cancer survival in China, 2003–2005: A population‐based study
Hongmei Zeng,Rongshou Zheng,Yuming Guo,Siwei Zhang,Xiaonong Zou,Ning Wang,Limei Zhang,Jingao Tang,Jianguo Chen,Kuangrong Wei,Suqin Huang,Jian Wang,Liang Yu,Deli Zhao,Guohui Song,Jianshun Chen,Yong-Zhou Shen,Xiaoping Yang,Xiaoping Gu,Feng Jin,Qilong Li,Yanhua Li,Hengming Ge,Fengdong Zhu,Jianmei Dong,Guoping Guo,Ming Wu,Lingbin Du,Xibin Sun,Yutong He,Michel P Coleman,Peter D. Baade,Wanqing Chen,Xue Qin Yu +33 more
TL;DR: The poor population survival rates in China emphasize the urgent need for government policy changes and investment to improve health services and increasing access of health service in rural areas and providing basic health‐care to the disadvantaged populations will be essential for reducing this disparity in the future.