Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
Eur J Health Econ. 2024 Jun;25(4):671-688. doi: 10.1007/s10198-023-01618-2. Epub 2023 Jul 22.
To study hiring discrimination against cancer survivors, we conduct a vignette experiment in which American and British professionals recruited via Prolific evaluate fictitious job candidates. Candidates differed by periods of non-employment in their career, including non-employment due to suffering from cancer. We study the effect of cancer experiences on professionals' hirability ratings, as well as its effect on underlying candidate perceptions, related to various potential forms of stigma identified in the literature. We find that employment opportunities are lower for candidates with a history of cancer, compared to candidates without such a gap. This penalty is particularly explained by perceptions that these candidates will have higher sick leave probabilities and create additional costs. However, relative to candidates with a comparable gap due to depression or personal reasons, former cancer patients are less stigmatised, with relatively favourable assessments of their emotional abilities, social abilities, motivation and positive impact on workplace culture.
为了研究对癌症幸存者的雇佣歧视,我们进行了一项情境实验,通过 Prolific 招募的美国和英国专业人士对虚构的求职者进行评估。求职者在职业发展过程中的失业时间不同,包括因患癌症而导致的失业。我们研究了癌症经历对专业人士的雇佣能力评级的影响,以及它对候选人认知的影响,这些认知与文献中确定的各种潜在形式的污名有关。我们发现,有癌症病史的求职者的就业机会比没有这种差距的求职者要低。这种惩罚主要归因于人们认为这些候选人请病假的概率更高,会带来额外的成本。然而,与因抑郁或个人原因而有类似空档的求职者相比,前癌症患者受到的污名化程度较低,他们的情绪能力、社交能力、动机和对工作场所文化的积极影响得到了相对有利的评价。