Although the attitudes of cancer survivors and their co-workers have changed, one factor has remained constant over the past generation— most cancer survivors want to, and in fact, are able to perform their jobs and return to work after diagnosis. Whether a survivor continues to work during treatment or returns to work after treatment, and if so, whether that survivor’s diagnosis or treatment will result in working limitations, depends on many factors.
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They include the survivor’s age, stage at diagnosis, financial status, education, and access to health insurance and transportation, as well as the physical demands of the job and the presence of any other chronic health conditions. Medical treatment decisions that consider quality of life and the shift towards providing cancer treatment in outpatient settings have contributed to the increasing number of survivors who can work during their treatment.
A 2006 national survey of cancer survivors (Breakaway from Cancer, 2006) found that most employers appear to be highly sensitive and accommodating to the needs of employees who have cancer or who are caregivers for cancer survivors. Three out of five survivors reported receiving co-worker support, such as help with work or random acts of kindness. Survivors and caregivers reported very low incidences of negative reactions from their employers and co-workers. The most common negative reaction, reported by one in five survivors, was that an employer gave a survivor less work. Other consequences, such as being fired or laid off (6%), denied a raise or promotion (7%), and denied health insurance benefits (4%), were far less common. Employees who worked in an office environment faced fewer cancer-related problems than did employees who worked in retail, restaurant, or factory settings.
Learn more about how cancer can affect your job:
How Employment Discrimination Laws Protect Cancer Survivors »
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