Behaviour, education and communication
C1 – C18
- C1: A systematic review of people’s views on human papillomavirus (HPV) testing and vaccination
- C2: Development and evaluation of a set of core Human Papillomavirus (HPV) messages to promote informed choice for both tests and vaccines for use in primary care and broader settings in the UK
- C3: Involving young people with cancer in research – The National Cancer Research Institute’s Teenage and Young Adult (TYA) Core Consumer Group (CCG) - a new and evolving model
- C4: Identifying patients’ information needs in upper gastro-intestinal (UGI) cancer
- C5: What’s in a word? Implications of response to weight status terminology for effective health promotion
- C6: Communicating the results of randomised controlled trials: do patients understand survival data?
- C7: An interactive teaching website in prostate conformal radiotherapy planning for oncology clinicians and trainees
- C8: Development and evaluation of a patient-centred tool to measure diagnostic delays (DELAYS2)
- C9: Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination: an exploratory study of the views of the first cohort of vaccination aged girls [12-13 years old]
- C10: Treating ungual disorders induced by chemotherapy with EVONAIL
- C11: Patients’ views of benefits and disadvantages of cancer support groups: influence of gender and prognosis
- C12: A methodology for the evaluation of patient satisfaction by an Early Phase Cancer Clinical Trials Unit
- C13: Continued development of consumer involvement in a research collaborative, and the use of Peer Education
- C14: SPARE: a qualitative study investigating randomisation barriers in a Selective Bladder Preservation trial (SBP) (ISCRCTN: 61126465; CRUK/07/011)
- C15: Long-term worries about cancer in women who have had a low-grade abnormal cervical smear
- C16: Can adequate vitamin D levels be achieved in the UK by following national recommendations on summer sunlight exposure?
- C17: Perceived barriers to Flexible Sigmoidoscopy screening among UK ethnic minority groups: A qualitative study
- C18: Do we blame people for their cancer diagnosis?