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Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers

BACKGROUND: Employment contributes to cancer survivors’ quality of life, but this population faces a variety of challenges when working during and after treatment. Factors associated with work outcomes among cancer survivors include disease and treatment status, work environment, and social support....

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Autores principales: Forcino, Rachel C, Rotenberg, Sivan, Morrissette, Kali J, Godzik, Cassandra M, Lichtenstein, Jonathan D, Schiffelbein, Jenna E, Stevens, Courtney J, Sundar, Vidya, Brucker, Debra L, Connolly, Deirdre, Keysor, Julie, Lyons, Kathleen Doyle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10337405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37358907
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/47263
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author Forcino, Rachel C
Rotenberg, Sivan
Morrissette, Kali J
Godzik, Cassandra M
Lichtenstein, Jonathan D
Schiffelbein, Jenna E
Stevens, Courtney J
Sundar, Vidya
Brucker, Debra L
Connolly, Deirdre
Keysor, Julie
Lyons, Kathleen Doyle
author_facet Forcino, Rachel C
Rotenberg, Sivan
Morrissette, Kali J
Godzik, Cassandra M
Lichtenstein, Jonathan D
Schiffelbein, Jenna E
Stevens, Courtney J
Sundar, Vidya
Brucker, Debra L
Connolly, Deirdre
Keysor, Julie
Lyons, Kathleen Doyle
author_sort Forcino, Rachel C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Employment contributes to cancer survivors’ quality of life, but this population faces a variety of challenges when working during and after treatment. Factors associated with work outcomes among cancer survivors include disease and treatment status, work environment, and social support. While effective employment interventions have been developed in other clinical contexts, existing interventions have demonstrated inconsistent effectiveness in supporting cancer survivors at work. We conducted this study as a preliminary step toward program development for employment support among survivors at a rural comprehensive cancer center. OBJECTIVE: We aimed (1) to identify supports and resources that stakeholders (cancer survivors, health care providers, and employers) suggest may help cancer survivors to maintain employment and (2) to describe stakeholders’ views on the advantages and disadvantages of intervention delivery models that incorporate those supports and resources. METHODS: We conducted a descriptive study collecting qualitative data from individual interviews and focus groups. Participants included adult cancer survivors, health care providers, and employers living or working in the Vermont–New Hampshire catchment area of the Dartmouth Cancer Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire. We grouped interview participants’ recommended supports and resources into 4 intervention delivery models, which ranged on a continuum from less to more intensive to deliver. We then asked focus group participants to discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each of the 4 delivery models. RESULTS: Interview participants (n=45) included 23 cancer survivors, 17 health care providers, and 5 employers. Focus group participants (n=12) included 6 cancer survivors, 4 health care providers, and 2 employers. The four delivery models were (1) provision of educational materials, (2) individual consultation with cancer survivors, (3) joint consultation with both cancer survivors and their employers, and (4) peer support or advisory groups. Each participant type acknowledged the value of providing educational materials, which could be crafted to improve accommodation-related interactions between survivors and employers. Participants saw usefulness in individual consultation but expressed concern about the costs of program delivery and potential mismatches between consultant recommendations and the limits of what employers can provide. For joint consultation, employers liked being part of the solution and the possibility of enhanced communication. Potential drawbacks included additional logistical burden and its perceived generalizability to all types of workers and workplaces. Survivors and health care providers viewed the efficiency and potency of peer support as benefits of a peer advisory group but acknowledged the sensitivity of financial topics as a possible disadvantage of addressing work challenges in a group setting. CONCLUSIONS: The 3 participant groups identified both common and unique advantages and disadvantages of the 4 delivery models, reflecting varied barriers and facilitators to their potential implementation in practice. Theory-driven strategies to address implementation barriers should play a central role in further intervention development.
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spelling pubmed-103374052023-07-13 Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers Forcino, Rachel C Rotenberg, Sivan Morrissette, Kali J Godzik, Cassandra M Lichtenstein, Jonathan D Schiffelbein, Jenna E Stevens, Courtney J Sundar, Vidya Brucker, Debra L Connolly, Deirdre Keysor, Julie Lyons, Kathleen Doyle JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Employment contributes to cancer survivors’ quality of life, but this population faces a variety of challenges when working during and after treatment. Factors associated with work outcomes among cancer survivors include disease and treatment status, work environment, and social support. While effective employment interventions have been developed in other clinical contexts, existing interventions have demonstrated inconsistent effectiveness in supporting cancer survivors at work. We conducted this study as a preliminary step toward program development for employment support among survivors at a rural comprehensive cancer center. OBJECTIVE: We aimed (1) to identify supports and resources that stakeholders (cancer survivors, health care providers, and employers) suggest may help cancer survivors to maintain employment and (2) to describe stakeholders’ views on the advantages and disadvantages of intervention delivery models that incorporate those supports and resources. METHODS: We conducted a descriptive study collecting qualitative data from individual interviews and focus groups. Participants included adult cancer survivors, health care providers, and employers living or working in the Vermont–New Hampshire catchment area of the Dartmouth Cancer Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire. We grouped interview participants’ recommended supports and resources into 4 intervention delivery models, which ranged on a continuum from less to more intensive to deliver. We then asked focus group participants to discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each of the 4 delivery models. RESULTS: Interview participants (n=45) included 23 cancer survivors, 17 health care providers, and 5 employers. Focus group participants (n=12) included 6 cancer survivors, 4 health care providers, and 2 employers. The four delivery models were (1) provision of educational materials, (2) individual consultation with cancer survivors, (3) joint consultation with both cancer survivors and their employers, and (4) peer support or advisory groups. Each participant type acknowledged the value of providing educational materials, which could be crafted to improve accommodation-related interactions between survivors and employers. Participants saw usefulness in individual consultation but expressed concern about the costs of program delivery and potential mismatches between consultant recommendations and the limits of what employers can provide. For joint consultation, employers liked being part of the solution and the possibility of enhanced communication. Potential drawbacks included additional logistical burden and its perceived generalizability to all types of workers and workplaces. Survivors and health care providers viewed the efficiency and potency of peer support as benefits of a peer advisory group but acknowledged the sensitivity of financial topics as a possible disadvantage of addressing work challenges in a group setting. CONCLUSIONS: The 3 participant groups identified both common and unique advantages and disadvantages of the 4 delivery models, reflecting varied barriers and facilitators to their potential implementation in practice. Theory-driven strategies to address implementation barriers should play a central role in further intervention development. JMIR Publications 2023-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10337405/ /pubmed/37358907 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/47263 Text en ©Rachel C Forcino, Sivan Rotenberg, Kali J Morrissette, Cassandra M Godzik, Jonathan D Lichtenstein, Jenna E Schiffelbein, Courtney J Stevens, Vidya Sundar, Debra L Brucker, Deirdre Connolly, Julie Keysor, Kathleen Doyle Lyons. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 26.06.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Forcino, Rachel C
Rotenberg, Sivan
Morrissette, Kali J
Godzik, Cassandra M
Lichtenstein, Jonathan D
Schiffelbein, Jenna E
Stevens, Courtney J
Sundar, Vidya
Brucker, Debra L
Connolly, Deirdre
Keysor, Julie
Lyons, Kathleen Doyle
Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers
title Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers
title_full Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers
title_fullStr Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers
title_short Exploring Acceptability of Employment Interventions to Support People Living With Cancer: Qualitative Study of Cancer Survivors, Health Care Providers, and Employers
title_sort exploring acceptability of employment interventions to support people living with cancer: qualitative study of cancer survivors, health care providers, and employers
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10337405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37358907
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/47263
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