10 Papers
Hui Xu is an academic researcher from China Medical University (PRC). The author has contributed to research in topics: Breast cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
The psychosocial adaptation of patients with skin disease: a scoping review.
TL;DR: A protocol of care model for psychosocial adaptation in patients with skin disease was constructed based on the previous literatures and provided the direction for developing new instruments that could assess psychossocial adaptation, but also a basis for helping patients adjust to changes in skin disease.
Factors influencing medication-taking behaviour with adjuvant endocrine therapy in women with breast cancer: A qualitative systematic review.
TL;DR: The systematic review highlights knowledge, balancing the scales, self-efficacy and support influence medication taking behavior to women with breast cancer.
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An Investigation of Symptom Clusters and Sentinel Symptoms During the First 2 Cycles of Postoperative Chemotherapy in Patients With Lung Cancer
TL;DR: Understanding of SCs and sentinel symptoms could be beneficial to assess and manage both in postoperative patients with lung cancer during chemotherapy, and nurses should pay close attention to sentinel Symptoms and develop effective interventions.
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Development and Evaluation of the Psychosocial Adaptation Questionnaire among Patients with Chronic Skin Disease.
Xiu-Jie Zhang,Hui Xu,Aiping Wang +2 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a questionnaire for patients with chronic skin disease (CSD) (PSAQ-CSD), which includes emotional, self-cognitive, and social dimensions.
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Fear of disease progression among breast cancer patients in China: a meta-analysis of studies using the fear of progression questionnaire short form.
Jiaoyan He,Hui Xu,Jing Yang,Dong Hou,Xiao-Yan Gong,Xiangshi Lu,Wei Wang,Mingjin Cai,Yunlei Yu,Jing Gao +9 more
TL;DR: A meta-analysis and systematic review found that FoP levels varied among breast cancer patients of different regions, ages, educational levels, marital statuses, residences, illness stages, and disease statuses and healthcare workers should be concerned.
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