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Skin cancer screening and prevention in primary health care setting: a pilot program in Delhi, India

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dc.contributor.advisor Movsisyan, Ani
dc.contributor.advisor Demirchyan, Anahit
dc.contributor.author Shingala, Darshan
dc.date.accessioned 2022-02-07T11:50:40Z
dc.date.available 2022-02-07T11:50:40Z
dc.date.created 2020
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.uri https://dspace.aua.am/xmlui/handle/123456789/2110
dc.description Thesis en_US
dc.description.abstract Skin cancer is classified as the most common type of cancer worldwide and is also one of the most preventable cancers. As per Global Cancer Statistics, melanoma skin cancer and non- melanoma skin cancer were the 19th and the 5th most frequently occurring cancers respectively worldwide in 2018. It is evidenced that most countries do not have a population- based cancer registry and those nations which do, usually do not account for skin cancers which implies probable underestimation of skin cancer burden. Skin cancer treatment availability, accessibility and cost vary throughout the world and substantially contribute to increased clinical and economic burden quantifiable in terms of lack of timely diagnosis, under-diagnosis, misdiagnosis, advanced medical care requirement and life-years lost. In India, skin cancer statistics are undocumented, however, it is estimated that skin malignancy represents about 1-2% of all cancer diagnoses; accurate statistical data associated with skin cancer is scarce due to lack of regulations to report any disease-specific death or diagnosis. Skin cancer is classified as the most common type of cancer worldwide and is also one of the most preventable cancers. As per Global Cancer Statistics, melanoma skin cancer and non- melanoma skin cancer were the 19th and the 5th most frequently occurring cancers respectively worldwide in 2018. It is evidenced that most countries do not have a population- based cancer registry and those nations which do, usually do not account for skin cancers which implies probable underestimation of skin cancer burden. Skin cancer treatment availability, accessibility and cost vary throughout the world and substantially contribute to increased clinical and economic burden quantifiable in terms of lack of timely diagnosis, under-diagnosis, misdiagnosis, advanced medical care requirement and life-years lost. In India, skin cancer statistics are undocumented, however, it is estimated that skin malignancy represents about 1-2% of all cancer diagnoses; accurate statistical data associated with skin cancer is scarce due to lack of regulations to report any disease-specific death or diagnosis. en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.subject 2020 en_US
dc.subject AUA en_US
dc.subject American University of Armenia (AUA) en_US
dc.subject Skin cancer en_US
dc.subject Prevention en_US
dc.subject Cancer en_US
dc.subject Skin en_US
dc.subject Risk factors en_US
dc.subject Non-melanoma skin cancers en_US
dc.subject NMSCs en_US
dc.subject Melanoma skin cancers en_US
dc.subject MSCs en_US
dc.subject Pigmentation of the skin en_US
dc.subject Skin cancer screening en_US
dc.subject Melanoma en_US
dc.subject Delhi--India en_US
dc.subject India en_US
dc.title Skin cancer screening and prevention in primary health care setting: a pilot program in Delhi, India en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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