Each year, VA diagnoses 4,000 new cases of colorectal cancer in Veterans. Colorectal cancer screening can help detect cancer early.
Scheduling regular check-ups to make sure cancer screenings take place is one way to catch or prevent cancer. Your VA provider can answer questions on what screening tests make sense for you based on your personal history and your risk factors.
VA’s Cancer Cabinet Community Conversation roundtable will be held at Noon EST on July 26, and the public is welcome to join us via YouTube.
NAFLD is a growing cause of liver disease. It has an estimated worldwide prevalence of 25% in adults. In the United States, that prevalence is projected to climb to nearly 34% by 2030.
VA’s National TeleOncology allows Veterans to receive world-class oncology care and services, regardless of where they live.
Aiming for the Moonshot: If you are diagnosed with cancer, Choose VA for your cancer care and survivorship.
Dr. Daphne Friedman joined VA as an oncologist at the […]
National TeleOncology Service is looking for talented academic hematologists or oncologists who are licensed to practice in the United States
VA National Oncology Program (NOP) is actively hiring oncologists for their National TeleOncology service (NTO).
On research panel, Marine Veteran shared his struggles after serving near Open Burn Pits. “They have taken the time to try to understand.”
Non-small cell lung cancer, the most common form of lung cancer, is the leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. Surgery is the gold standard treatment for early-stage lung cancer.
In the two VA-supported studies, Hastings and Borden collaborated with colleagues at the University of Arizona who specialize in statistical analysis and evaluation of biological data. Hastings is an associate professor at Arizona State University, with an academic focus on immunobiology.