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Work-health balance of cancer survivors returning to work: A meta-ethnography. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This meta-ethnography examines the health-related experiences of cancer survivors returning to work, emphasizing the importance of employment for their overall well-being amid rising cancer cases in working-age individuals.
  • A thorough literature review identified relevant qualitative studies from 2013 to 2023, focusing on cancer survivors' motivations, concerns, resilience, and support needs during their return-to-work journey.
  • Five main themes emerged: motivations for returning to work, cancer-related concerns, the importance of resilience, the necessity for healthcare support, and the need for workplace accommodations, highlighting the crucial role of guidance from healthcare providers and employers in facilitating a successful return to work.

Article Abstract

Purpose: This meta-ethnography investigates the multifaceted health-related experiences of cancer survivors returning to work (RTW), recognizing the pivotal role of employment in overall well-being, particularly in the context of increasing cancer cases among working-age adults.

Method: Following the methodology of Noblit and Hare, a comprehensive literature search was conducted from 2013 to 2023 in databases including PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Embase. Qualitative studies assessing cancer survivors' experiences, motivation, concern, resilience, and need in the process of RTW were identified. Eligible studies were assessed for quality using the Critical Appraisal Skills Program Checklist, and their findings were subsequently synthesized.

Results: Seventeen studies were included for analysis. The finding revealed five key themes: motivations (voluntary and involuntary), cancer-related concerns, resilience, needs for cancer healthcare support, and workplace accommodation. Voluntarily RTW was primarily linked to desires of normalcy, while involuntary RTW was often financially driven. Cancer survivors often face physical, psychological, and social challenges in the RTW process. Resilience played a crucial role in their readaptation to the workplace. Participants expressed the need for additional guidance from healthcare providers and tailored support from the workplace to facilitate a smoother RTW experience.

Conclusion: Cancer survivors aspire to be actively engaged, have their specific needs addressed, and achieve success in their return-to-work endeavors. Occupational guidance and accommodation from healthcare providers and employers play a pivotal role in empowering survivors to balance cancer and work, facilitating the return-to-work process, and enhancing the quality of survivorship.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejon.2023.102482DOI Listing

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