Workforce participation in relation to cancer diagnosis, type and stage: Australian population-based study of 163,556 middle-aged people
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Date
Authors
Thandrayen, Joanne
Joshy, Grace
Stubbs, John
Bailey, Louise
Butow, Phyllis
Koczwara, Bogda
Laidsaar-Powell, Rebekah
Rankin, Nicole M.
Beckwith, Katie
Soga, Kay
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Volume Title
Publisher
Springer US
Abstract
Purpose To quantify the relationship of cancer diagnosis to workforce participation in Australia, according to cancer type,
clinical features and personal characteristics.
Methods Questionnaire data (2006–2009) from participants aged 45–64 years (n=163,556) from the population-based 45 and Up
Study (n=267,153) in New South Wales, Australia, were linked to cancer registrations to ascertain cancer diagnoses up to
enrolment. Modified Poisson regression estimated age- and sex-adjusted prevalence ratios (PRs) for non-participation in the
paid workforce—in participants with cancer (n=8,333) versus without (n=155,223), for 13 cancer types.
Results Overall, 42% of cancer survivors and 29% of people without cancer were out of the workforce (PR=1.18; 95%CI=1.15–
1.21). Workforce non-participation varied substantively by cancer type, being greatest for multiple myeloma (1.83; 1.53–2.18),
oesophageal (1.70; 1.13–2.58) and lung cancer (1.68; 1.45–1.93) and moderate for colorectal (1.23; 1.15–1.33), breast (1.11;
1.06–1.16) and prostate cancer (1.06; 0.99–1.13). Long-term survivors, 5 or more years post-diagnosis, had 12% (7–16%) greater
non-participation than people without cancer, and non-participation was greater with recent diagnosis, treatment or advanced
stage. Physical disability contributed substantively to reduced workforce participation, regardless of cancer diagnosis.
Conclusions Cancer survivors aged 45–64 continue to participate in the workforce. However, participation is lower than in
people without cancer, varying by cancer type, and is reduced particularly around the time of diagnosis and treatment and with
advanced disease.
Implications for Cancer Survivors While many cancer survivors continue with paid work, participation is reduced. Workforce
retention support should be tailored to survivor preferences, cancer type and cancer journey stage.
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Source
Journal of Cancer Survivorship
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Book Title
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Access Statement
Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License