a Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, Healthcare Delivery Research Program, National Cancer Institute , Rockville , Maryland , USA.
b ICF International , Fairfax , VA.
J Psychosoc Oncol. 2018 May-Jun;36(3):287-303. doi: 10.1080/07347332.2018.1440274. Epub 2018 Apr 10.
We examined the longitudinal association between sociodemographic factors and an expanded definition of underemployment among those with and without cancer history in the United States.
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data (2007-2013) were used in multivariable regression analyses to compare employment status between baseline and two-year follow-up among adults aged 25-62 years at baseline (n = 1,614 with and n = 39,324 without cancer). Underemployment was defined as becoming/staying unemployed, changing from full to part-time, or reducing part-time work significantly. Interaction effects between cancer history/time since diagnosis and predictors known to be associated with employment patterns, including age, gender/marital status, education, and health insurance status at baseline were modeled.
Approximately 25% of cancer survivors and 21% of individuals without cancer reported underemployment at follow-up (p = 0.002). Multivariable analyses indicated that those with a cancer history report underemployment more frequently (24.7%) than those without cancer (21.4%, p = 0.002) with underemployment rates increasing with time since cancer diagnosis. A significant interaction between gender/marital status and cancer history and underemployment was found (p = 0.0004). There were no other significant interactions. Married female survivors diagnosed >10 years ago reported underemployment most commonly (38.7%), and married men without cancer reported underemployment most infrequently (14.0%). A wider absolute difference in underemployment reports for married versus unmarried women as compared to married versus unmarried men was evident, with the widest difference apparent for unmarried versus married women diagnosed >10 years ago (18.1% vs. 38.7%).
Cancer survivors are more likely to experience underemployment than those without cancer. Longer time since cancer diagnosis and gender/marital status are critical factors in predicting those at greatest risk of underemployment. The impact of cancer on work should be systematically studied across sociodemographic groups and recognized as a component of comprehensive survivorship care.
我们在美国研究了社会人口因素与癌症患者和非癌症患者中广义失业定义之间的纵向关联。
采用多变量回归分析方法,使用医疗支出面板调查数据(2007-2013 年),比较了基线时年龄在 25-62 岁之间的成年人在基线和两年随访时的就业状况(有癌症病史者 1614 人,无癌症病史者 39324 人)。失业定义为失业/保持失业状态、从全职转为兼职、或大幅减少兼职工作。建立了癌症病史/诊断后时间与就业模式相关的预测因子(包括年龄、性别/婚姻状况、教育程度和健康保险状况)之间的交互作用模型。
大约 25%的癌症幸存者和 21%的无癌症个体在随访时报告失业(p=0.002)。多变量分析表明,有癌症病史的人报告失业的频率更高(24.7%),而无癌症病史的人报告失业的频率较低(21.4%,p=0.002),且随着癌症诊断后时间的延长,失业率增加。发现性别/婚姻状况与癌症病史和失业之间存在显著的交互作用(p=0.0004)。没有其他显著的交互作用。10 年前诊断出癌症的已婚女性幸存者报告失业的比例最高(38.7%),而无癌症的已婚男性报告失业的比例最低(14.0%)。已婚女性与未婚女性、已婚男性与未婚男性之间的失业报告差异明显,10 年前诊断出癌症的已婚女性与未婚女性之间的差异最大(18.1%比 38.7%)。
癌症幸存者比非癌症患者更有可能失业。癌症诊断后时间较长以及性别/婚姻状况是预测失业风险最高人群的关键因素。应系统地研究癌症对工作的影响,并将其视为全面生存护理的一个组成部分。