Perceived discrimination at work: examining social, health and work-related factors as determinants among breast cancer survivors - evidence from the prospective CANTO cohort

Garazi Ruiz De Azua, Ines Vaz-Luis, Thomas Bovagnet, Antonio Di Meglio, Julie Havas, Elsa Caumette, Elise Martin, Barbara Pistilli, Charles Coutant, Paul Cottu, Philippe Rouanet, Antoine Arnaud, Olivier Arsene, Mahmoud Ibrahim, Johanna Wassermann, Roman Rouzier, Anne Laure Martin, Sibille Everhard, Agnes Dumas, Gwenn Menvielle

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Résumé

    Background We assessed the prevalence of self-reported perceived discrimination in the workplace after the end of treatment among breast cancer (BC) survivors and studied its association with social, health-related and work-related factors. Methods We used data from a French prospective cohort (CANcer TOxicities) including women diagnosed with stage I-III BC. Our analysis included 2130 women who were employed, <57 years old at BC diagnosis and were working 2 years afterwards. We assessed the association between social, health-related and work-related factors and perceived discrimination in the workplace using logistic regression models. Results Overall, 26% of women reported perceived discrimination in the workplace after the end of treatment. Women working for a small company, in the public sector or with better overall health status were less likely to report perceived discrimination. Women who benefited from easing dispositions at their workplace, who did not feel supported by their colleagues and those who returned to work because of fear of job loss were more likely to report perceived discrimination. Conclusions One in four BC survivors perceives discrimination in the workplace. Health and work-related factors are associated with increased likelihood of reporting perceived discrimination. Trial registration number NCT01993498.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Pages (de - à)918-924
    Nombre de pages7
    journalJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health
    Volume76
    Numéro de publication11
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 6 sept. 2022

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