National Cancer Registry Ireland, Building 6800, Cork Airport Business Park, Kinsale Road, Cork, Ireland.
J Cancer Surviv. 2011 Dec;5(4):382-94. doi: 10.1007/s11764-011-0183-9. Epub 2011 Jun 17.
Around 40% of cancer survivors are of working age. We investigated employment outcomes among survivors in Ireland where sick leave and sick pay are at the employers' discretion and the law affords no protection against dismissal following extended absence.
A questionnaire was mailed to 1,373 survivors, identified from the National Cancer Registry, 6-24 months post-diagnosis. The analysis included breast and prostate cancer respondents who were working at diagnosis. Factors associated with work continuation post-diagnosis and work resumption after cancer-related absence were identified using logistic regression.
The response rate was 54%. Three hundred forty-six respondents were working at diagnosis (breast cancer = 246; prostate cancer = 100). Sixty-two (18%) continued working post-diagnosis. Factors significantly associated with work continuation were: self-employment, prostate cancer, lower pre-diagnosis household income, and not having surgery. Two hundred eighty-four took time off work post-diagnosis; of these, 51 (18%) had left the workforce, 187 (66%) had resumed working, and 46 (16%) planned to resume working. Factors significantly associated with work resumption were: tertiary education, not having chemotherapy, receiving sick pay, and not having a medical card (which provides free access to public health services). Among those who resumed working, the median absence was 30.1 weeks (inter-quartile range = 12.9-51.6). The length of absence varied significantly by socio-demographic, financial, medical, and job- and social welfare-related factors. Median working hours pre- and post-diagnosis differed significantly (pre-diagnosis = 38/week; post-diagnosis = 30/week; p<0.001).
The high level of workforce departure and associations between self-employment, sick pay and medical cards, and employment outcomes suggest that social welfare and legal provisions are important determinants of the survivors' workforce participation. IMPLICATIONS FOR SURVIVORS: In formulating strategies to optimise survivors' employment outcomes, it is important that policy- and decision-makers are aware of the influence of social welfare and legal provisions.
大约 40%的癌症幸存者处于工作年龄。我们在爱尔兰调查了癌症幸存者的就业情况,在爱尔兰,病假和病假工资由雇主自行决定,法律也没有规定在长期缺勤后解雇员工的保护。
从国家癌症登记处,在诊断后 6-24 个月,向 1373 名幸存者邮寄了一份问卷。分析包括在诊断时工作的乳腺癌和前列腺癌患者。使用逻辑回归确定与诊断后继续工作以及癌症相关缺勤后恢复工作相关的因素。
回复率为 54%。346 名受访者在诊断时工作(乳腺癌=246;前列腺癌=100)。62 人(18%)继续在诊断后工作。与继续工作显著相关的因素包括:自营职业、前列腺癌、较低的诊断前家庭收入、以及未进行手术。284 人在诊断后请假;其中,51 人(18%)已离开劳动力大军,187 人(66%)已恢复工作,46 人(16%)计划恢复工作。与恢复工作显著相关的因素包括:高等教育、未接受化疗、获得病假工资和没有医疗卡(提供免费公共卫生服务)。在恢复工作的人中,缺勤中位数为 30.1 周(四分位间距=12.9-51.6)。缺勤时间因社会人口统计学、财务、医疗和工作及社会福利相关因素而异。诊断前后的平均工作时间有显著差异(诊断前=38 小时/周;诊断后=30 小时/周;p<0.001)。
劳动力大量流失,以及自营职业、病假工资和医疗卡与就业结果之间的关联表明,社会福利和法律规定是决定幸存者劳动力参与的重要因素。对幸存者的影响:在制定优化幸存者就业结果的策略时,政策制定者和决策者应意识到社会福利和法律规定的影响。