Breast cancer is a very common malignancy with serious health effects that often involves women in the prime of their lives. Drolet and colleagues report on the work experience of women recently diagnosed with breast cancer.
Compared to matched health control women, women with breast cancer who remained free of the disease for at least 3 years after diagnosis were much more likely than healthy women to be absent from work for 4 weeks or more (85% vs. 18%). However, by the third year work absence patterns were similar. The authors also report work absence and its patterns for women who underwent chemotherapy, and describe factors that modulate absence patterns (such as being in a stable relationship and being self-employed).
Some of these absences exceeded the 15-week federal employment insurance available during periods of illness. The shorter patterns of work absence among the self-employed and those who were single may represent expressions of the financial burden of this common illness.
Dr. Elizabeth Maunsell | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.uresp.ulaval.ca
www.cmaj.ca
More articles from
Studies and Analyses:
Study: Tropical wetlands hold more carbon than temperate marshes
10.10.2008 | Ohio State University
Study finds abnormalities in cerebral cortex of cocaine addicts
10.10.2008 | Massachusetts General Hospital
Scientists find new insight into genome of neglected malaria parasite
10.10.2008 | Life Sciences
Hodgkin lymphoma -- new characteristics discovered
10.10.2008 | Life Sciences
Digital zebrafish embryo provides the first complete developmental blueprint of a vertebrate
10.10.2008 | Life Sciences