Volkert Siersma
University of Copenhagen
363 Papers
763 Citations
Volkert Siersma is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 288 publications.
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Papers
Maternal pain influences her evaluation of recurrent pain in 6- to 11-year-old healthy children
Anette Hauskov Graungaard,Volkert Siersma,Kirsten Lykke,Ruth Kirk Ertmann,Lisbeth E. Knudsen,Marjukka Mäkelä +5 more
TL;DR: This work compared pain reported by healthy children and their mothers, to evaluate their agreement, and also looked at the effect of maternal health on children's pain.
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Long-term psychosocial consequences of false-positive screening mammography: a cohort study with follow-up of 12–14 years in Denmark
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compared the long-term psychosocial consequences of mammography screening among women with breast cancer, normal results and false-positive results, and found that women with false positive results averagely reported higher psychoSocial consequences compared with women with normal findings.
Specific location of ocular adnexal lymphoma and mortality: an international multicentre retrospective study
Stine Dahl Vest,Sarah E. Coupland,Bita Esmaeli,Paul T. Finger,Gerardo F. Graue,Hans E. Grossniklaus,Tine Gadegaard Hindsø,Frederik Holm,Santosh G Honavar,Jwu Jin Khong,Marina Knudsen Kirkegaard,Penelope A McKelvie,Lauge Hjorth Mikkelsen,Kaustubh Mulay,Peter Rasmussen,Volkert Siersma,Lene Dissing Sjö,Matthew C. Sniegowski,Bradley A. Thuro,Geeta K. Vemuganti,Steffen Heegaard +20 more
TL;DR: Disease-specific mortality is associated with AJCC/TNM T-stage in primary ocular adnexal EMZL patients and lymphoma of the eyelid has the highest disease- specific mortality in primary EMZl, and in the full cohort of EMzL and DLBCL patients.
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Dementia and traffic accidents: a Danish register-based cohort study
TL;DR: This study aims to investigate the risk of road traffic-related accidents for people aged 65 years or older with a diagnosis of dementia in Denmark, and thereby will avoid selection bias due to nonparticipation and loss to follow-up.
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Psychosocial consequences among women with false-positive results after mammography screening in Norway.
TL;DR: The results indicate that the psychosocial consequences from having false-positive screening mammography results diminish after six months, and indicates that Norwegian women are less frightened than other Scandinavian mammography screening participants.
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