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Title: Return to work, work productivity loss and activity impairment in Chinese breast cancer survivors 12-month post-surgery : a longitudinal study
Authors: Ng, DWL
So, SCY
Fielding, R
Mehnert-Theuerkauf, A
Kwong, A
Suen, D
Wong, L
Fung, SWW
Chun, OK
Fong, DYT
Chan, S
Molasiotis, A 
So, WKW
Lam, WWT
Issue Date: 2024
Source: Frontiers in public health, 2024, v. 12, 1340920
Abstract: Introduction: Existing evidence of returning-to-work (RTW) after cancer comes predominately from Western settings, with none prospectively examined since the initial diagnostic phase. This study prospectively documents RTW-rate, time-to-RTW, work productivity loss, and activity impairment, within the first-year post-surgery among Chinese women with breast cancer (BCW) and identify potential causal co-variants.
Methods: This observational longitudinal study followed 371 Chinese BCW who were employed/self-employed at the time of diagnosis at 4-week post-surgery (baseline). RTW-status and time-to-RTW were assessed at baseline (T1), 4-month (T2), 6-month (T3), and 12-month (T4) post-baseline. WPAI work productivity loss and activity impairment were assessed at T4. Baseline covariates included demographics, medical-related factors, work satisfaction, perceived work demand, work condition, RTW self-efficacy, B-IPQ illness perception, COST financial well-being, EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BR23 physical and psychosocial functioning, and HADS psychological distress.
Results: A 68.2% RTW-rate (at 12-month post-surgery), prolonged delay in RTW (median = 183 days), and significant proportions of T4 work productivity loss (20%), and activity impairment (26%), were seen. BCW who were blue-collar workers with lower household income, poorer financial well-being, lower RTW self-efficacy, poorer job satisfaction, poorer illness perception, greater physical symptom distress, impaired physical functioning, and unfavorable work conditions were more likely to experience undesired work-related outcomes.
Discussion: Using a multifactorial approach, effective RTW interventions should focus on not only symptom management, but also to address psychosocial and work-environmental concerns. An organizational or policy level intervention involving a multidisciplinary team comprising nurses, psychologists, occupational health professionals, and relevant stakeholders in the workplace might be helpful in developing a tailored organizational policy promoting work-related outcomes in BCW.
Keywords: Activity impairment
Breast cancer
Employment
Return to work
Survival analysis
Work condition
Work productivity
Publisher: Frontiers Research Foundation
Journal: Frontiers in public health 
EISSN: 2296-2565
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1340920
Rights: © 2024 Ng, So, Fielding, Mehnert-Theuerkauf, Kwong, Suen, Wong, Fung, Chun, Fong, Chan, Molasiotis, So and Lam. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
The following publication Ng DWL, So SCY, Fielding R, Mehnert-Theuerkauf A, Kwong A, Suen D, Wong L, Fung SWW, Chun OK, Fong DYT, Chan S, Molasiotis A, So WKW and Lam WWT (2024) Return to work, work productivity loss and activity impairment in Chinese breast cancer survivors 12-month post-surgery: a longitudinal study. Front. Public Health 12:1340920 is available at https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1340920.
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