Depressive symptom Fully Mediates the Association between Physical Activity and Subjective Cognitive Impairment among Middle-aged and elderly patients with breast cancer receiving chemotherapy
Depressive symptom Fully Mediates the Association between Physical Activity and Subjective Cognitive Impairment among Middle-aged and elderly patients with breast cancer receiving chemotherapy
Support the assessment and management of frailty in your patients with a new suite of eviQ resources. These resources have been developed in collaboration with the Geriatric Oncology Emerging Experts and Researchers (GOEER) group and the COSA Geriatric Oncology Group within the Clinical Oncology Society of Australia. These resources aim to support improved care experiences and outcomes for older Australians with cancer.
In this insightful webinar, we unpacked delirium in people with cancer—examining risk factors, causes, prevention strategies, and its far-reaching impact across the care continuum.
Connection, shared experience and practical learning sit at the heart of CNSA’s Communities of Practice. In April, a record six CoPs came together, creating space for cancer nurses across the country to exchange insights, explore emerging challenges and learn from one another in a supportive, peer-led environment.
Catch up on key insights about the most common side effects of breast cancer treatment—and why early referral to Allied Health can make all the difference. Learn practical tips to support better recovery and long‑term wellbeing.
A new targeted oral therapy is changing the landscape for people with hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative metastatic breast cancer, offering another option for those whose disease has progressed on prior treatment. This practical session will step through how the treatment works, when it is used and what makes its side effect profile distinct.
Australia now has clarity it has never had before: 20,950 Australians are living with metastatic breast cancer — more than double what was previously understood. This new national estimate exposes decades of undercounting, underestimated need, and under-resourced care.