TY - JOUR
T1 - Change in the value of work after breast cancer
T2 - evidence from a prospective cohort
AU - Caumette, Elsa
AU - Di Meglio, Antonio
AU - Vaz-Luis, Inès
AU - Charles, Cécile
AU - Havas, Julie
AU - de Azua, Garazi Ruiz
AU - Martin, Elise
AU - Vanlemmens, Laurence
AU - Delaloge, Suzette
AU - Everhard, Sibille
AU - Martin, Anne Laure
AU - Merimeche, Asma Dhaini
AU - Rigal, Olivier
AU - Coutant, Charles
AU - Fournier, Marion
AU - Jouannaud, Christelle
AU - Soulie, Patrick
AU - Cottu, Paul Henri
AU - Tredan, Olivier
AU - Menvielle, Gwenn
AU - Dumas, Agnès
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2023/6/1
Y1 - 2023/6/1
N2 - Background: Return to work (RTW) after cancer can be modulated by psychosocial factors, including a reordering of one’s life values, with more emphasis on private life than work-life. This change in patients’ outlook on work-life is however poorly understood. Methods: We used data from a French cohort (CANTO, NCT01993498) of women diagnosed with stage I–III primary breast cancer (BC) prospectively assessing life priorities between work and private life at diagnosis and 2 years after diagnosis. We identified women who reported a shift in life values toward private life, and we investigated the clinical, demographic, work-related, and psychosocial determinants of this change using logistic regressions. Results: Overall, 46% (N = 1097) of the women had reordered their life priorities toward private life 2 years after diagnosis. The factors positively associated with this shift included being diagnosed with stage III BC, perceiving one’s job as not very interesting, being an employee/clerk (vs. executive occupation), perceiving no support from the supervisor at baseline, perceiving negative interferences of cancer in daily life, and perceiving a positive impact from experiencing cancer. Depressive symptoms were negatively associated with this shift. Conclusion: After BC, there seems to be an important reordering of life values, with more emphasis on private life. This change is influenced by clinical determinants, but also by work-related and psychosocial factors. Implications for Cancer Survivors: Stakeholders should consider this change in a patient’s outlook on work-life as much as the classical physical late effects when designing post-BC programs to support RTW.
AB - Background: Return to work (RTW) after cancer can be modulated by psychosocial factors, including a reordering of one’s life values, with more emphasis on private life than work-life. This change in patients’ outlook on work-life is however poorly understood. Methods: We used data from a French cohort (CANTO, NCT01993498) of women diagnosed with stage I–III primary breast cancer (BC) prospectively assessing life priorities between work and private life at diagnosis and 2 years after diagnosis. We identified women who reported a shift in life values toward private life, and we investigated the clinical, demographic, work-related, and psychosocial determinants of this change using logistic regressions. Results: Overall, 46% (N = 1097) of the women had reordered their life priorities toward private life 2 years after diagnosis. The factors positively associated with this shift included being diagnosed with stage III BC, perceiving one’s job as not very interesting, being an employee/clerk (vs. executive occupation), perceiving no support from the supervisor at baseline, perceiving negative interferences of cancer in daily life, and perceiving a positive impact from experiencing cancer. Depressive symptoms were negatively associated with this shift. Conclusion: After BC, there seems to be an important reordering of life values, with more emphasis on private life. This change is influenced by clinical determinants, but also by work-related and psychosocial factors. Implications for Cancer Survivors: Stakeholders should consider this change in a patient’s outlook on work-life as much as the classical physical late effects when designing post-BC programs to support RTW.
KW - Breast cancer
KW - Change of value of work
KW - Cohort
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85126033810&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11764-022-01197-w
DO - 10.1007/s11764-022-01197-w
M3 - Article
C2 - 35267143
AN - SCOPUS:85126033810
SN - 1932-2259
VL - 17
SP - 694
EP - 705
JO - Journal of Cancer Survivorship
JF - Journal of Cancer Survivorship
IS - 3
ER -