4.6 Article

Impact of physical and psychosocial dysfunction on return to work in survivors of oral cavity cancer

Journal

PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 9, Pages 1910-1917

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pon.5173

Keywords

cancer; oncology; oral cavity cancer; physical function; return to work; social-emotional function; social support; survivor

Funding

  1. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital [CMRPF1H0131]
  2. Chang Gung University of Science and Technology [ZRRPF3H0061]
  3. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) [MOST 103-2629-B-255-001, NSC 102-2629-B-255-001]

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Objective To compare the levels of social support, physical function, and social-emotional function between oral cavity cancer survivors who did or did not resume work 6 months or longer after treatment completion. Methods This cross-sectional study examined survivors of oral cavity cancer who were treated at the outpatient radiation department of a medical center in Northern Taiwan. Questionnaires were used to collect data regarding perceived social support, physical function, social-emotional function, and return to work status after treatment. Logistic regression was conducted to determine factors related to returning to work. Results We examined 174 survivors of oral cavity cancer, 55.2% of whom returned to work after treatment. Relative to survivors who returned to work, those who did not return to work reported needing greater tangible social support, having fewer positive social interactions, having poorer physical function, and having poorer social-emotional function. Multivariable analysis indicated that younger age (OR = 0.864, P < .05), higher family income (OR = 10.835, P < .05), sufficient tangible social support (OR = 0.943, P < .05), positive social interaction (OR = 1.025, P < .05), and better physical function (OR = 1.062, P < .05) were significantly associated with the return to work. Conclusions Survivors of oral cavity cancer who did not return to work had worse physical and social-emotional function and required more tangible social support and positive social interactions. Providing occupational rehabilitation and counseling for oral cavity cancer survivors may help them return to work.

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