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Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives

OBJECTIVES: This study explored how demographic characteristics, life experiences, and firefighting exposures have an impact on cancer among female firefighters, and described the types and biologic characteristics of cancers as reported by women in the fire service. METHODS: The online survey was a...

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Autores principales: Kunz, Kenneth Robert, Turcotte, Kate, Pawer, Samantha, Zheng, Alex, Purewal, Amanat, Wellar, Alyssa, Karmali, Shazya, Garis, Len, Thomas, Larry S., Pike, Ian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10130581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37124817
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1126066
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author Kunz, Kenneth Robert
Turcotte, Kate
Pawer, Samantha
Zheng, Alex
Purewal, Amanat
Wellar, Alyssa
Karmali, Shazya
Garis, Len
Thomas, Larry S.
Pike, Ian
author_facet Kunz, Kenneth Robert
Turcotte, Kate
Pawer, Samantha
Zheng, Alex
Purewal, Amanat
Wellar, Alyssa
Karmali, Shazya
Garis, Len
Thomas, Larry S.
Pike, Ian
author_sort Kunz, Kenneth Robert
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: This study explored how demographic characteristics, life experiences, and firefighting exposures have an impact on cancer among female firefighters, and described the types and biologic characteristics of cancers as reported by women in the fire service. METHODS: The online survey was available from June 2019 to July 2020. Questions related to demographic characteristics, lifestyle factors, firefighting exposures, and cancer diagnoses. Descriptive analyses characterized variables by the presence or absence of cancer. Qualitative data provided insight into both firefighting and cancer experiences among women. RESULTS: There were 1,344 female firefighter respondents from 12 different countries, 256 of whom provided information on their cancer diagnosis. North American respondents made up 92% of the total. Those with cancer were older, had been in the fire service longer, had more career fires and toxic exposures, and were less likely to still be in active service. They also reported more tobacco use, and more full-term pregnancies. There were no differences in family history of cancer between the two groups. The average age at diagnosis was 39.0 years. The major types of cancer reported included breast (25.4%), cervical (21.1%), melanoma (20.7%), base cell/skin (16.4%), and uterine (14.8%). The cancer was detected when seeking medical attention for symptoms (42.1%), during routine health screening (29.8%), and during specific cancer screening (28.1%). The stage of cancer was reported by 44.5%, and 30.9% included the histopathological grade. Treatments included surgery (72.7%), chemotherapy (14.8%), radiotherapy (13.7%), and observation (13.7%). Challenges associated with cancer included psychosocial (33.2%), financial (18.8%), physical (6.6%), and spiritual (6.3%). Concerns about reporting a cancer experience to their employer included the desire to keep health information private (11.3%), a feeling of vulnerability (7.4%), and being perceived as weak (7.0%). Lack of support from their employer or insurer was also noted. CONCLUSION: Female firefighters experienced a wide variety of different types of cancers which may come earlier than similar cancers in the public. These findings can help inform resource allocation, the development of new policies, and the need for broader presumptive coverage to support female firefighters diagnosed with cancer.
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spelling pubmed-101305812023-04-27 Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives Kunz, Kenneth Robert Turcotte, Kate Pawer, Samantha Zheng, Alex Purewal, Amanat Wellar, Alyssa Karmali, Shazya Garis, Len Thomas, Larry S. Pike, Ian Front Public Health Public Health OBJECTIVES: This study explored how demographic characteristics, life experiences, and firefighting exposures have an impact on cancer among female firefighters, and described the types and biologic characteristics of cancers as reported by women in the fire service. METHODS: The online survey was available from June 2019 to July 2020. Questions related to demographic characteristics, lifestyle factors, firefighting exposures, and cancer diagnoses. Descriptive analyses characterized variables by the presence or absence of cancer. Qualitative data provided insight into both firefighting and cancer experiences among women. RESULTS: There were 1,344 female firefighter respondents from 12 different countries, 256 of whom provided information on their cancer diagnosis. North American respondents made up 92% of the total. Those with cancer were older, had been in the fire service longer, had more career fires and toxic exposures, and were less likely to still be in active service. They also reported more tobacco use, and more full-term pregnancies. There were no differences in family history of cancer between the two groups. The average age at diagnosis was 39.0 years. The major types of cancer reported included breast (25.4%), cervical (21.1%), melanoma (20.7%), base cell/skin (16.4%), and uterine (14.8%). The cancer was detected when seeking medical attention for symptoms (42.1%), during routine health screening (29.8%), and during specific cancer screening (28.1%). The stage of cancer was reported by 44.5%, and 30.9% included the histopathological grade. Treatments included surgery (72.7%), chemotherapy (14.8%), radiotherapy (13.7%), and observation (13.7%). Challenges associated with cancer included psychosocial (33.2%), financial (18.8%), physical (6.6%), and spiritual (6.3%). Concerns about reporting a cancer experience to their employer included the desire to keep health information private (11.3%), a feeling of vulnerability (7.4%), and being perceived as weak (7.0%). Lack of support from their employer or insurer was also noted. CONCLUSION: Female firefighters experienced a wide variety of different types of cancers which may come earlier than similar cancers in the public. These findings can help inform resource allocation, the development of new policies, and the need for broader presumptive coverage to support female firefighters diagnosed with cancer. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10130581/ /pubmed/37124817 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1126066 Text en Copyright © 2023 Kunz, Turcotte, Pawer, Zheng, Purewal, Wellar, Karmali, Garis, Thomas and Pike. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Public Health
Kunz, Kenneth Robert
Turcotte, Kate
Pawer, Samantha
Zheng, Alex
Purewal, Amanat
Wellar, Alyssa
Karmali, Shazya
Garis, Len
Thomas, Larry S.
Pike, Ian
Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives
title Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives
title_full Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives
title_fullStr Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives
title_short Cancer in female firefighters: The clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives
title_sort cancer in female firefighters: the clinicobiological, psychological, and social perspectives
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10130581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37124817
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1126066
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