Tali Foreman
Boston Children's Hospital
6 Papers
130 Citations
Tali Foreman is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Social environment. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications. Previous affiliations of Tali Foreman include University of New South Wales.
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Papers
Hidden financial costs in treatment for childhood cancer: an Australian study of lifestyle implications for families absorbing out-of-pocket expenses.
TL;DR: While all families may incur extra expenses, parents of patients located a significant distance from the cancer treatment center remain especially vulnerable (despite increased government allowances).
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The Role of Primary Care Physicians in Childhood Cancer Survivorship Care: Multiperspective Interviews
Christina Signorelli,Claire E. Wakefield,Joanna E. Fardell,Joanna E. Fardell,Tali Foreman,Tali Foreman,Karen Johnston,Karen Johnston,Jon Emery,Elysia Thornton-Benko,Afaf Girgis,Hanne Cathrine Lie,Richard J. Cohn,Richard J. Cohn +13 more
TL;DR: Improved communication and greater PCP involvement during treatment/early survivorship may help overcome survivors' and parents' low confidence in PCPs.
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Parental grieving after a child dies from cancer: is stress from stem cell transplant a factor?
TL;DR: Routine psychosocial screening, especially for families undergoing SCT, may contribute usefully to a proactive model of palliative care in identifying parents at risk for complicated bereavement outcomes.
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Hospital-Based Support Groups for Parents of Seriously Unwell Children: An Example from Pediatric Oncology in Australia
TL;DR: Despite lower than anticipated parental attendance, findings indicated that open-ended hospital-based groups have specific relevance for families dealing with diagnosis and treatment of childhood cancer, providing a safe forum for support, information provision and knowledge-sharing.
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‘Re-engage’ pilot study protocol: a nurse-led eHealth intervention to re-engage, educate and empower childhood cancer survivors
Christina Signorelli,Claire E. Wakefield,Karen Johnston,Joanna E. Fardell,Mary Ellen E. Brierley,Elysia Thornton-Benko,Tali Foreman,Kate Webber,W. Hamish B. Wallace,Richard J. Cohn +9 more
TL;DR: If Re-engage is acceptable, feasible and demonstrates early efficacy, it may have the potential to empower survivors in coordinating their complex care, improving survivors’ long-term engagement and satisfaction with care.
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