The association of cancer-related fatigue on the social, vocational and healthcare-related dimensions of cancer survivorship

BACKGROUNDCancer-related fatigue (CRF) is well documented in cancer survivors, but little is known about the personal and societal impact of CRF. This study aimed to examine the impact of CRF in relation to social and vocational functioning and health care utilization in a large sample of post-treat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cancer survivorship 2023-08
Hauptverfasser: Jones, Jennifer M., Howell, Doris, Longo, Christopher, Olson, Karin, Bedard, Philippe, Amir, Eitan, Zheng, Shiyu, Chow, Brittany, Avery, Lisa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUNDCancer-related fatigue (CRF) is well documented in cancer survivors, but little is known about the personal and societal impact of CRF. This study aimed to examine the impact of CRF in relation to social and vocational functioning and health care utilization in a large sample of post-treatment cancer survivors. METHODSWe conducted a cross-sectional descriptive study of early stage breast and colorectal cancer survivors (n = 454) who were within 5 years from treatment completion. Social difficulties (SDI-21), work status, absenteeism and presenteeism (WHO-HPQ) and healthcare utilization (HSUQ) were compared in those with (CFR +) and without (CRF -) clinically significant fatigue (FACT-F ≤ 34). RESULTSA total of 32% met the cut-off criteria for CRF (≤ 34). Participants with CRF + had significantly higher scores on the SDI-21 across all domains and 55% of CRF + vs. 11% in CRF - was above the SDI cut-off (> 10) for significant social difficulties. Participants with CRF + were 2.74 times more likely to be unemployed or on leave (95% CI 1.62, 4.61, p 
ISSN:1932-2259
1932-2267
DOI:10.1007/s11764-023-01451-9