Employment outcomes of adolescent and young adult cancer survivors and their partners: A Dutch population‐based study

Author:

Dankers Polle W.12ORCID,Janssen Silvie H. M.13ORCID,van Eenbergen Mies45ORCID,Siflinger Bettina M.2,van der Graaf Winette T. A.16ORCID,Husson Olga137ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Oncology Netherlands Cancer Institute ‐ Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Amsterdam The Netherlands

2. Department of Econometrics and Operations Research Tilburg University Tilburg The Netherlands

3. Department of Psychosocial Research and Epidemiology Netherlands Cancer Institute Amsterdam The Netherlands

4. Department of Research and Development Netherlands Comprehensive Cancer Organization Utrecht The Netherlands

5. Department of Communication and Cognition Tilburg University Tilburg The Netherlands

6. Department of Medical Oncology Erasmus MC Cancer Institute Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

7. Department of Surgical Oncology Erasmus MC Cancer Institute Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe aim of this population‐based registry study was to examine the impact of cancer on employment outcomes in adolescent and young adult (AYA) survivors and their partners and associated sociodemographic and clinical characteristics.MethodsA total of 2456 AYA cancer patients, diagnosed in 2013 and aged 18 through 39 years old, were selected from the Netherlands Cancer Registry and linked to employment data from Statistics Netherlands, from which 1252 partners of AYAs could be identified. For both patients and their partners, a control group with same age, migration background, and sex was selected. The impact (i.e., causal effect) was estimated by implementing a doubly robust difference‐in‐differences method, from 3 years before to 5 years after cancer diagnosis.ResultsPatients suffered a reduced employment probability (3.8 percentage points) and number of hours worked when employed (3.8%). This effect was larger for females, and individuals with a migration background, high tumor stage, or diagnosed with a central nervous system tumor/hematologic malignancy. In regard to employment, no significant effect could be found for the patients’ partners, although a 5.5 percentage‐point increase in employment probability was found in partners who were either unemployed or worked fewer than 400 hours.ConclusionsA cancer diagnosis significantly affects employment outcomes of AYA patients with cancer. Patients at risk should have access to services such as job counseling to help them return into society in the best possible way. No objective impact on partners’ employment outcomes was found; however, subjective well‐being was not taken into account.Plain Language Summary This study estimated the causal effect of a cancer diagnosis on employment outcomes. Adolescent and young adult cancer survivors face a reduction in both employment probability and the number of hours worked when employed. Partners that were unemployed or worked the least number of hours a year before diagnosis had a 5.5 percentage‐point increased employment probability, but for other partners effects are small.

Funder

Ministerie van Volksgezondheid, Welzijn en Sport

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

KWF Kankerbestrijding

Publisher

Wiley

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