1. Work-Related Outcomes in Self-Employed Cancer Survivors: A European Multi-country Study.
- Author
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Torp, Steffen, Paraponaris, Alain, Van Hoof, Elke, Lindbohm, Marja-Liisa, Tamminga, Sietske J., Alleaume, Caroline, Van Campenhout, Nick, Sharp, Linda, and de Boer, Angela G. E. M.
- Subjects
CANCER patient psychology ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EMPLOYMENT reentry ,JOB satisfaction ,PUBLIC welfare ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL security ,SELF-employment ,CROSS-sectional method ,JOB involvement ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose To describe: (i) patterns of self-employment and social welfare provisions for self-employed and salaried workers in several European countries; (ii) work-related outcomes after cancer in self-employed people and to compare these with the work-related outcomes of salaried survivors within each sample; and (iii) work-related outcomes for self-employed cancer survivors across countries. Methods Data from 11 samples from seven European countries were included. All samples had cross-sectional survey data on work outcomes in self-employed and salaried cancer survivors who were working at time of diagnosis (n = 22–261 self-employed/101–1871 salaried). The samples included different cancers and assessed different outcomes at different times post-diagnosis. Results Fewer self-employed cancer survivors took time off work due to cancer compared to salaried survivors. More self-employed than salaried survivors worked post-diagnosis in almost all countries. Among those working at the time of survey, self-employed survivors had made a larger reduction in working hours compared to pre-diagnosis, but they still worked more hours per week post-diagnosis than salaried survivors. The self-employed had received less financial compensation when absent from work post-cancer, and more self-employed, than salaried, survivors reported a negative financial change due to the cancer. There were differences between self-employed and salaried survivors in physical job demands, work ability and quality-of-life but the direction and magnitude of the differences differed across countries. Conclusion Despite sample differences, self-employed survivors more often continued working during treatment and had, in general, worse financial outcomes than salaried cancer survivors. Other work-related outcomes differed in different directions across countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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