| Literature DB >> 35972645 |
Chloe Yi Shing Lim1, Rebekah C Laidsaar-Powell2, Jane M Young3,4, Daniel Steffens5,6, Bogda Koczwara7,8, Yuehan Zhang9, Phyllis Butow2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Continuing employment or returning to work (RTW) as a cancer survivor can be meaningful and financially necessary, yet challenging. However, there is a lack of qualitative research on RTW experiences and financial wellbeing of people with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC-A). This study aimed to fill this gap.Entities:
Keywords: Bowel cancer; Cancer survivorship; Financial wellbeing; Qualitative interviews; Return to work
Year: 2022 PMID: 35972645 PMCID: PMC9378257 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-07307-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.359
Participant demographics, clinical data, and PROs (N = 38)
| Demographics | |
| Gender, | 16 male (42%) |
| Age, median (range) | 59 years (27–84) |
| Employment status, | |
| Full time | 9 (24%) |
| Part time | 6 (16%) |
| On leave | 3 (8%) |
| Unemployed/home duties | 4 (11%) |
| Retired | 16 (42%) |
| Profession, | |
| Professional | 17 (45%) |
| Clerical or administrative worker | 4 (11%) |
| Technician or trade worker | 6 (16%) |
| Manager | 6 (16%) |
| Labourer | 3 (8%) |
| Sales worker | 1 (3%) |
| Home duties | 1 (3%) |
| Education, | |
| None/primary school | 1 (3%) |
| Intermediate certificate/year 10 | 7 (18%) |
| High school completion/year 12 | 5 (13%) |
| Technical certificate/diploma | 14 (37%) |
| University degree | 11 (29%) |
| Income, | |
| Less than $20,000 | 4 (11%) |
| $20,000 to $34,999 | 2 (5%) |
| $35,000 to $49,999 | 5 (13%) |
| $50,000 to $74,999 | 8 (21%) |
| $75,000 to $99,999 | 2 (5%) |
| $100,000 to $149,999 | 6 (16%) |
| $150,000 to $199,999 | 3 (8%) |
| $200,000 or above | 3 (8%) |
| Prefer not to say | 5 (13%) |
| Marital status, | |
| Married/living with partner | 20 (53%) |
| Separated/divorced | 8 (21%) |
| Single (never married) | 7 (18%) |
| Widowed | 3 (8%) |
| Self-identified culture/ethnicity, | |
| Australian/New Zealand | 20 (53%) |
| UK | 9 (24%) |
| Other European | 4 (11%) |
| South Pacific/Oceania | 1 (3%) |
| East Asian | 1 (3%) |
| South Asian | 3 (8%) |
| Place of residence, | |
| Metropolitan | 26 (68%) |
| Rural | 12 (32%) |
| Clinical data | |
| Tumour type, | |
| Rectal | 17 (45%) |
| Colon | 20 (53%) |
| Bowel, unspecified | 1 (3%) |
| Stage at first diagnosis, | |
| I | 1 (3%) |
| II | 7 (18%) |
| III | 11 (29%) |
| IV | 15 (39%) |
| Unsure | 4 (11%) |
| Status at diagnosis, | |
| Recurrent | 18 (47%) |
| Locally advanced or metastatic | 20 (53%) |
| Treatment for advanced CRC, | |
| Liver resection | 9 (24%) |
| CRS-HIPEC | 6 (16%) |
| Pelvic exenteration | 10 (26%) |
| Liver resection + CRS-HIPEC* | 6 (16%) |
| Palliative chemotherapy | 7 (18%) |
| Additional treatment, | |
| Previous colorectal surgery | 19 (50%) |
| Hormone replacement therapy | 1 (3%) |
| Adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemo and/or radiation | 32 (84%) |
| Time since treatment in months, median (range) | 14 (6–28) |
| Stoma, | |
| None | 18 (47%) |
| Temporary, reversed | 9 (24%) |
| Temporary, due for reversal | 3 (8%) |
| Permanent | 8 (21%) |
| Comorbidities, | 19 (50%) |
| PROs | |
| FACT-C, median (range) | |
| Liver resection | 106 (56–128) |
| CRS-HIPEC | 106 (81–129) |
| Pelvic exenteration | 100 (59–130) |
| Liver resection + CRS-HIPEC* | 104 (96–132) |
| Palliative chemotherapy | 102 (71.7–11) |
| Distress, median (range) | |
| Liver resection | 4 (0–10) |
| CRS-HIPEC | 2 (0–6.5) |
| Pelvic exenteration | 4 (0–9) |
| Liver resection + CRS-HIPEC* | 3 (0–6) |
| Palliative chemotherapy | 2 (1–7) |
| COST, median (range) | |
| Liver resection | 30 (10–33) |
| CRS-HIPEC | 28 (21–43) |
| Pelvic exenteration | 37 (4–40) |
| Liver resection + CRS-HIPEC* | 22 (13–44) |
| Palliative chemotherapy | 28 (19–40) |
*Six participants had received both liver resection and CRS-HIPEC; thus, a fifth combined group was formed
Fig. 1Themes, subthemes, and framework analysis findings
Additional quotes
| Subpoint | Example quote |
|---|---|
| Theme 1: “ | |
| Physical impacts of CRC and its treatment make RTW a struggle | “My mobility, that was probably the hardest part about returning to work, I didn’t have mobility.” (Survivor_PEx) |
| “I can be somewhere and then I just leak out [from my SPC] and so I choose not to go out unless I really have to… the main part of [my job] is I am travelling a lot and I’m going from site to site… So it’s not like I can sit in the office and go to the toilet every five minutes just to make sure that it’s always empty. I just can’t do that. And as I said I’ve got no control… It is very unpredictable.” (Survivor_PEx) | |
| Working from home due to COVID-19 helped the RTW process | “I didn’t have to be anywhere and you couldn’t go anywhere [because of COVID]. That was good that I could recover. And everyone was home at the same time. …I started to work from home a couple of months before I went back in the office.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) |
| Uncertainty of when treatment will end, to RTW | “I think my chemo is going to end, probably [in a few months]? …And hopefully I won’t need any other treatment, but… it’s all very much up in the air.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) |
| Uncertain if able to RTW | “[RTW] kind of depends upon prognosis as well. I mean the other thing with that is that I have to have chemo every two weeks… So it would be hard to imagine what sort of job I could do… apart from running my own business, I don’t really have any qualifications in anything so I wouldn't know where to begin.” (Survivor_PallChemo) |
| “I did think of going back to work, though. But, my concern is will my body [handle] all the stress jobs? …That’s why I have doubt [about] go[ing] back to work.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) | |
| “I think that I could transition to retirement… or I may well choose to go back full time. It’s dependent on how I go… This [cancer] could become aggressive, this could travel to a part of my body that they can’t treat or manage as well. You know, it can change very, very quickly. So I don’t know what the future is.” (Survivor_PallChemo) | |
| Feeling helpless and agitated when not able to RTW without doctor’s clearance | “When I started chemo after the operation… it took me near on a month to get an answer out of the doctor as to when I could possibly return to work so that I could claim for income protection. But they just weren’t really giving me a timeframe to return, based on what sort of a reaction I’m going to have with the chemotherapy.” (Survivor_PEx) |
| RTW was challenging and stressful, leading to reducing work load or quitting | “My job’s very stressful and I am cutting back.” (Survivor_LR) |
| “Because I quit my job, I made my life easier, so it’s not as tough as it seems… I don’t have much pressure.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) | |
| Work was a struggle, and there are benefits to not working anymore | “[Not working]’s good for me. My garden was ignored for a year, so I’ve been spending a lot of time bringing that back. I’ve also started painting the inside of my house, freshening it up. So I’m really enjoying not working and I’m enjoying having days with my son.” (Survivor_PEx) |
| Hard to work when feeling like they have lost motivation | “I just lost little bit [of] motivation. I do work, it’s not an issue, but I just have to push myself in my head, “OK, you go back to work.”” (Survivor_LR) |
| “When you finish University… you want to get promoted and try new skills… But [CRC-A] was a little bit of a setback for me… I’ll still do my job and I still do a bit more challenging work towards the career development but not as much [as] how focussed I was before.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| Retirement or promotion delayed due to cancer | “[Cancer]’s just slowed [my future work plans and goals] down a bit. It’s probably put an extra year or two on my retirement… I’ll probably stay [working] a bit longer than I was going to.” (Survivor_PEx) |
| “Just before I found out I had the cancer, I applied for a job… and it was the [senior] position, which I did get. And then I couldn’t take it. So, I asked them if they could hold the job for me, but they couldn’t… it was really horrible, and mentally, it really, really threw me…” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| Theme 2: “ | |
| Mourning the loss of work-related meaning, purpose, and identity | “I’m 200 per cent dedicated to work when I work… That’s what I miss.” (Survivor_PallChemo) |
| “I think it’s good for everybody to get back into things and get a little bit of confidence back rather than just sitting at home seven days a week, not really interacting, I think it’s good for your self-esteem and get rid of that “Mummy” tag and become [myself] again.” (Survivor_LR) | |
| Unable to return to previous longstanding job, which formed a significant part of their identity | “I was a [tradesperson] for 20-odd years, and then I went into supervision… So, with [my doctor] saying [I can’t return to work], he’s thrown a spanner into the works, so now I have to look at something inside which I’ve never done… it’s the uncertainty that’s the scary bit. I’ve worked all my life.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| “I tried for so many years to get into [this job], and then when I got there… I had the perfect life… getting sick has just wrecked all those plans for me now… I want to… get back to work… I don’t know what path I could choose, but I definitely can’t go back to [this job].” (Survivor_LR) | |
| Theme 3: “ | |
| Work is good for mental wellbeing | “Work for me is good for my mental health. I’m actually better… doing things than sitting at home… so I was happy to be back at work and I’ve got an incredibly supportive staff who know me through both my cancers and [the clients]… they take your mind off things pretty quickly so I didn’t have time to dwell on things.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| “Work, to me, was a bit of a saviour… it helped me… Getting out of the house, because I think the more time you spend in the house and alone… that can get into depression, which I didn’t want to go down. And there’s eight of us [colleagues] and they’re friends. And it was my social interaction, coming to the office.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| Working for normality and routine | “It wasn’t like I had to go to work. It was more that, “I am bored. I want to go to work and there’s nothing wrong with me… for my sanity. Yes, “I’ve had enough of home.”” (PE survivor) |
| “Six months [of chemo were] gone and [I] started recovering… so [I] decided to [go] back to work to get some sort of normal day-to-day routine life.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| Unemployment as boring | “[Not working] drives me f***ing nuts… I’m climbing the f***ing walls around here… the hardest thing I think I’ve ever had to do is do nothing.” (Survivor_PEx) |
| “When I was running my own business, so I’m up and out every day, and it’s no big deal to have meetings with people or go and have a coffee or something nearly every day with somebody… And that doesn’t happen anymore.” (Survivor_PallChemo) | |
| “I like to be doing something and I get bored fairly easily. One can only read so many books, do so many crosswords and things. I enjoyed working.” (Survivor_PallChemo) | |
| Theme 4: “ | |
| Did not experience much financial hardship from direct costs of treatment, due to Australian Government and Medicare system | “Medicare covers a lot, but I do have private health and that covers the majority of what’s left. So no financial impact on me at all.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) |
| “I think [the] Australian Government is really good, I did not spend much on the medical. I had a colonoscopy last week, and it’s free! Almost everything is free.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) | |
| “I was travelling about 200 kms a day to get my treatment. So, [the Government] reimbursed me… they put about $200/$300 in my account to cover my fuel… And they paid for my accommodation…when I was getting [my] radiation treatment.” (Survivor_PEx) | |
| Discounted medication and stomas | “For some medications, it was only $6.30.” (Survivor_PallChemo) |
| “The appliances and the stuff I get [for my stoma]… it’s government subsidised, I’m not actually paying for that… I just pay for the postage.” (Survivor_PEx) | |
| Concerned about financially providing for family | “It’s the lack of the financial security. Because you have no income…I got two kids to raise.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) |
| “I hardly ever call in sick… because I was thinking about my wife, my family and how they would do financially if I wasn’t there, so I tried to minimise how much leave I would take so that if anything we would be able to use it as a last resort… I’m the biggest earner in the family so if something was to happen to me then that would be a bit of an issue.” (Survivor of liver resection [Survivor_LR]) | |
| Financial anxiety from uncertainty about RTW after income protection ends | “That’s a financial burden because I’m the breadwinner of the family… I really don’t know what’s going to happen in the future. I know that I’m only covered up to the age of 67 but I’m hoping that I'm well and truly back to work by then.” (Survivor_PEx) |
| Financial challenges limiting social activities and travel plans | “I used to do aqua very regularly… and I absolutely love it. I had to defer my membership because it wasn’t economical.” (Survivor_PallChemo) |
| “We don’t have the luxuries that we used to. And because we don’t have family here, flying [interstate] to see them, it’s really expensive for all four of us. It costs over $1000 in flights. And we can’t just say, “Let’s just go up for the weekend,” so I certainly miss that.” (Survivor_PEx) | |
| Theme 5: “ | |
| Subtheme 5A: “ | |
| Supportive workplace | “I’m a schoolteacher so I took a whole term off work but I returned back to work… that year, full time.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| “I was on sick leave… but… my job is still there for me when I want to go back.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| “They gave me twelve months… to make a decision whether I wanted to come back to work and, in what capacity… so they’ve been absolutely fantastic.” (Survivor_PEx) | |
| Supportive HR policies and RTW programmes | “[My HR person] said, “The company has an insurance policy, income replacement,” …So for the first 18 months I didn’t even have to use my sick leave [or] my super.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) |
| “I went back to work for about a year, part time, slowly easing into it, I was doing two days a week, and then three days a week and occasionally four if we were busy.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| Workplace accommodations | “We’ve got an agreement at work that whenever I feel like it, I just walk out and go home; luckily I only live ten minutes down the road… and go to the toilet… it took the stress away. Because the biggest problem is the toilet.” (Survivor_LR/CRS-HIPEC) |
| “I didn’t have playground duties… they took me off to try and get me off my feet… so work was very understanding.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| Unsupportive workplace | “The Enterprise Agreement says that once you exhaust all of your entitlements, they give you 18 weeks to return back to work on full duties, and if you don’t… the company can put you off… I exhausted all my leave and then the 18 weeks. And basically, that was it. Done and dusted.” (Survivor_LR) |
| Large organisations as unsupportive | “They’ve got no obligation to look after me financially… A multi-million-dollar company.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| Subtheme 5B: “ | |
| Openly disclosed CRC-A diagnosis to workplace | “I was happy to be back at work and I’ve got an incredibly supportive staff who know me through both my cancers.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| Colleagues were supportive in response to cancer diagnosis | “My workmates… they’re my friends as well so they were very supportive.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| “My staff lived the disease with me… they spent more time with me in the final parts of recovery probably than my wife did. She only put up with me when I’m home, but they were putting up with me all day.” (Survivor_PEx) | |
| Selectively disclosed diagnosis to few people in workplace | “I didn’t really let anyone know until the very last moment.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| “[I was] as open as I wanted to be. I didn’t tell everyone what happened to me, and they still don’t know.” (Survivor_LR) | |
| “When I left, a few people knew that I’m sick but my manager obviously kept it private. He just shared with what he had to share with, like directors or senior management, those people, HR.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| “Some people know that I was sick but they don’t know what I had or to what extent… (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |
| No control over disclosure in workplace | “The company – I didn’t want anyone to know but they had to let people know.” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) |
| “I don’t even know who has how much information [about my diagnosis].” (Survivor_CRS-HIPEC) | |