Residual work capacity and (in)ability to work fulltime among a year cohort of cancer survivors who claim a disability benefit.

J Cancer Surviv

Department of Health Sciences, Community and Occupational Medicine, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, PO Box 196, 9700 AD, Groningen, The Netherlands.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the prevalence of residual work capacity (RWC) and inability to work full-time (IWF) among cancer survivors claiming disability benefits, revealing that 42.6% had no RWC and 69.8% of those with RWC were assessed as having IWF.
  • Different cancer types showed varying odds for these outcomes, with respiratory cancers being more likely linked to no RWC and lymphoid/hematopoietic cancers associated with IWF.
  • The findings highlight the significant impact of cancer on work ability, indicating a need for support to help survivors return to work, as only 15% of applicants could work full-time two years after diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Residual work capacity (RWC) and inability to work fulltime (IWF) are important outcomes in disability benefit assessments for workers diagnosed with cancer. The aim of this study is to gain insight into the prevalence of both outcomes, the associations of disease-related and socio-demographic factors and if these differ across cancer diagnosis groups.

Methods: A year cohort of anonymized register data of cancer survivors who claim a disability benefit after 2 years of sick leave (n = 3690, age 53.3 ± 8.8, 60.4% female) was used. Having no RWC was defined as having no possibilities to perform any work at all, whereas IWF was defined as being able to work less than 8 h per day.

Results: The prevalence of being assessed with no RWC was 42.6%. Of the applicants with RWC (57.4%), 69.8% were assessed with IWF. Cancers of the respiratory organs showed the highest odds for having no RWC, whereas lymphoid and haematopoietic cancers showed the highest odds for IWF. Within specific cancer diagnosis groups, different associations were identified for both outcomes.

Conclusion: The prevalence of no RWC and IWF in applicants of work disability benefits diagnosed with cancer is high compared to the prevalence in other diagnoses. The odds for no RWC, IWF, and associated factors differ per cancer diagnosis group.

Implications For Cancer Survivors: Being diagnosed with cancer has an enormous impact on work (dis)ability. Our results show that 2 years after being diagnosed with cancer, the majority of the disability benefit applicants are assessed with RWC; however, only 15% of all applicants with cancer had a normal ability to work fulltime, and therefore, it is of great importance to accompany them in their return to work.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11764-021-01147-yDOI Listing

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