scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Employment challenges for cancer survivors.

TLDR
An overview of the current state of scientific research in cancer survivorship and work, including factors that promote and hinder return to work and work performance, and intervention studies and programs that focus on psychological, physical, pharmacologic, or multidisciplinary approaches to work is provided.
Abstract
There is a considerable body of evidence about the adverse effects of cancer and cancer treatments on employment, work ability, work performance, and work satisfaction among cancer survivors. There is also a growing consensus that cancer survivorship research needs to address the large variety of short-term and long-term work-related problems and that programs to support return to work and employment should be developed and integrated into the follow-up survivorship care of cancer patients. Cancer survivorship and employment can be considered from the perspective of the cancer survivor, the caregiver and the family, the employer and coworkers, the health care providers, and the community or society—elements that comprise many similarities but also differences between Europe and the Unites States and that may affect employment and return to work among cancer survivors in different ways. Previous research has specifically addressed the likelihood and timeliness of work return, including factors that promote and hinder return to work and work performance, and intervention studies and programs that focus on psychological, physical, pharmacologic, or multidisciplinary approaches to work. The area of work disability has emerged as an international field with research from areas throughout the globe. In this article, the authors provide an overview of the current state of scientific research in these areas and further provide a cancer survivorship and work model that integrates significant individual cancer-related, treatment-related, and work-related factors and outcomes. The report concludes with a discussion of European and American contributions and possible future directions for the enhancement of current efforts. Cancer 2013;119(11 suppl):2151-59. V C 2013 American Cancer Society.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and implementation of work-related medical rehabilitation in cancer patients using organizational ethnography and action research methodology.

TL;DR: Implementation studies can help to prepare for valid trials as they facilitate ensuring the feasibility, acceptability and fidelity of program implementation and evaluation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Managing the Consequences of Oncological Major Surgery: A Short- and Medium-Term Skills Assessment Proposal for Patient and Caregiver through M.A.D.I.T. Methodology

TL;DR: Both patients and caregivers should be taken over by healthcare professionals to improve patients’ competences and make the curative surgery effective in daily life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Residential mobility among adult cancer survivors in the United States.

TL;DR: The odds of neighborhood relocation among cancer survivors were negatively associated with increasing age, perceived neighborhood social cohesion, having high school level education, and being married; while positively associated with having family income below the poverty threshold, being uninsured, and living in non-Northeast regions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Challenge of Return to Work after Breast Cancer: The Role of Family Situation, CANTO Cohort

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effect of the family situation on women's return to work after breast cancer and found that women living with a partner returned less to work (OR = 0.63 [0.47-0.86]) and decreased their working time after RTW.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer and productivity loss in the Irish economy: an employer’s perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the productivity costs associated with cancer-related premature mortality in Ireland using the employer-focussed friction-cost approach (FCA) and presented the first estimate of its kind in Ireland.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Delphi method

TL;DR: The Delphi method was originally developed in the 50s by the RAND Corporation and was used more often especially for national science and technology foresight and therefore the value of the process as such was acknowledged.
Posted Content

Human Development Report 2011. Sustainability and Equity: A Better Future for All

TL;DR: The 2011 Human Development Report argues that the urgent global challenges of sustainability and equity must be addressed together and identifies policies on the national and global level that could spur mutually reinforcing progress towards these interlinked goals as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer survivors and unemployment: a meta-analysis and meta-regression.

TL;DR: Cancer survivorship is associated with unemployment, and the unemployment risk for survivors in the United States was 1.5 times higher compared with survivors in Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Employment and work-related issues in cancer survivors

TL;DR: A systematic literature review as discussed by the authors identified current knowledge about employment in cancer survivors and identified factors significantly associated with a greater likelihood of being employed or return to work were perceived employer accommodation, flexible working arrangements, counseling, training and rehabilitation services, younger age and cancer sites of younger individuals, higher levels of education, male gender, less physical symptoms, lower length of sick leave and continuity of care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Burden of Illness in Cancer Survivors: Findings From a Population-Based National Sample

TL;DR: Cancer survivors have poorer health outcomes than do similar individuals without cancer across multiple burden measures and these decrements are consistent across tumor sites and are found in patients many years following reported diagnosis.
Related Papers (5)