Department of Gynecologic Oncology and Reproductive Medicine, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Cancer Epidemiol. 2022 Feb;76:102059. doi: 10.1016/j.canep.2021.102059. Epub 2021 Nov 23.
Cancer diagnosis and treatment can lead to disruptions in employment, which can, in turn, lead to financial problems and uninsurance. We used a nationally representative survey to describe predictors of non-employment among cancer patients compared to a matched cohort of individuals without cancer.
This was a retrospective study of the 2005-2018 nationally representative Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. We included respondents aged 18-64 and identified the cohort with current cancer by healthcare utilization related to a cancer diagnosis in the given year. We propensity-score matched controls to cancer cases in a 2:1 ratio. Survey weights were applied to generate national estimates of non-employment among the study cohort compared to the overall U.S.
The Adjusted Wald test was used to compare employment outcomes between groups. Weighted multivariable linear regression was utilized to assess factors independently associated with non-employment.
An estimated annual mean of 3.9 million cancer patients in the U.S. were included. Relative to controls, cancer patients had higher rates of part-year (36.0% vs 28.3%, P < 0.0001) and full-year non-employment (22.7% vs 17.5%, P < 0.0001). In a multivariable model, cancer diagnosis was associated with a 6.8% higher risk of part-year non-employment, 4.1% higher risk of full-year non-employment, and 14.8% lower individual earnings relative to the matched U.S.
Sub-groups of cancer patients at high risk of negative employment outcomes included those enrolled in Medicaid, those without a high school degree, and those with high healthcare utilization. Low family income was the strongest predictor of non-employment.
Cancer patients were at greater risk of non-employment relative to matched controls and adverse employment outcomes disproportionately affected cancer patients from vulnerable populations.
癌症的诊断和治疗可能导致就业中断,进而导致财务问题和没有保险。我们使用一项全国代表性调查来描述癌症患者与未患癌症的匹配队列相比失业的预测因素。
这是对 2005-2018 年全国代表性医疗支出面板调查的回顾性研究。我们纳入了年龄在 18-64 岁之间的受访者,并通过当年与癌症诊断相关的医疗保健利用来确定当年有癌症的队列。我们以 2:1 的比例对癌症病例进行倾向评分匹配对照。应用调查权重生成与美国整体相比,研究队列中失业的全国估计数。
采用校正 Wald 检验比较两组间的就业结果。采用加权多变量线性回归评估与失业独立相关的因素。
估计每年有 390 万美国癌症患者纳入研究。与对照组相比,癌症患者的部分年份(36.0%比 28.3%,P<0.0001)和全年非就业(22.7%比 17.5%,P<0.0001)率更高。在多变量模型中,癌症诊断与部分年份非就业的风险增加 6.8%、全年非就业的风险增加 4.1%以及个体收入减少 14.8%相关,与匹配的美国人群相比。
癌症患者中面临高负面就业结果风险的亚组包括参加医疗补助计划的患者、没有高中学历的患者以及医疗保健利用率高的患者。低收入家庭是失业的最强预测因素。
与匹配对照组相比,癌症患者失业的风险更高,弱势人群中的癌症患者的不良就业结果不成比例地受到影响。