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Stacey Marjerrison

Researcher at McMaster University

Publications -  32
Citations -  506

Stacey Marjerrison is an academic researcher from McMaster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Pediatric cancer. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 25 publications receiving 335 citations. Previous affiliations of Stacey Marjerrison include Halifax & University of Toronto.

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Improving health research among Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

TL;DR: Historically, Indigenous methods, methodologies, epistemologies, knowledge and perspectives have been dismissed as unsuitable for health research by a dominant Western science paradigm.
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Prevalance and associations of food insecurity in children with diabetes mellitus.

TL;DR: Food insecurity was more common in families with a child with DM, and the presence of food insecurity was predictive of the child's hospitalization, and risk factors identified in this study should be used to screen for this problem.
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Global Use of Traditional and Complementary Medicine in Childhood Cancer: A Systematic Review.

TL;DR: The use of T&CM in pediatric oncology is common worldwide, with higher median prevalence of use reported in LIC/LMIC than in middle-income countries, and rates of disclosure differed significantly by country income.
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Deficit-Based Indigenous Health Research and the Stereotyping of Indigenous Peoples

TL;DR: In this paper, the incompatibility of deficit-based research with principles from several ethical frameworks including the Tri-Council Policy Statement (TCPS2) Chapter 9, OCAP® (ownership, control, access, possession), Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami National Inuit Strategy on Research, and Canadian Coalition for Global Health Research (CCGHR) Principles for Global health Research was explored.
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Exercise interventions for patients with pediatric cancer during inpatient acute care: A systematic review of literature.

TL;DR: This review summarizes current exercise intervention data in the inpatient pediatric oncology setting and recommends that general physical activity programming be offered to pediatric on cancer inpatients.