2021
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.690454
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Racial and Ethnic Differences in the Financial Consequences of Cancer-Related Employment Disruption

Abstract: IntroductionCancer-related employment disruption contributes to financial toxicity and associated clinical outcomes through income loss and changes in health insurance and may not be uniformly experienced. We examined racial/ethnic differences in the financial consequences of employment disruption.MethodsWe surveyed a national sample of cancer patients employed at diagnosis who had received assistance from a national nonprofit about the impact of cancer diagnosis and treatment on employment. We used logistic r… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
(87 reference statements)
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“…Burden of TNBC Patients with cancer have to face many concerns after their diagnosis, including costs, the important decision of where and how to be treated, and what can be expected in their future. Beyond the psychological aspects of facing a life-threatening disease and treatment toxicities, another burden of this disease is represented by financial toxicity that particularly affects patients of color across all tumor types 94 , and is associated with lower quality of life, distress, treatment delays or discontinuation, and higher mortality 95 . Within two years of diagnosis, the negative impact of financial costs is quite substantial as self-reported by all patients with BC enrolled in phase 3 of the CBCS, but even more striking among Black women (58 vs 39% of White women), including income loss, healthcare-related financial and transportation barriers, job loss, and loss of health insurance.…”
Section: Tnbc In the Community Racial Disparities In Outcomes And Tnbcmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Burden of TNBC Patients with cancer have to face many concerns after their diagnosis, including costs, the important decision of where and how to be treated, and what can be expected in their future. Beyond the psychological aspects of facing a life-threatening disease and treatment toxicities, another burden of this disease is represented by financial toxicity that particularly affects patients of color across all tumor types 94 , and is associated with lower quality of life, distress, treatment delays or discontinuation, and higher mortality 95 . Within two years of diagnosis, the negative impact of financial costs is quite substantial as self-reported by all patients with BC enrolled in phase 3 of the CBCS, but even more striking among Black women (58 vs 39% of White women), including income loss, healthcare-related financial and transportation barriers, job loss, and loss of health insurance.…”
Section: Tnbc In the Community Racial Disparities In Outcomes And Tnbcmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Accordingly, 45-73% of cancer survivors report some manifestation of financial toxicity according to subjective and material conditions measures [16,17]. The thoughtful deployment of virtual encounters might engender reductions in patient medical and nonmedical out-of-pocket costs, avoidance of unnecessary hospital visits, and minimization of employment disruption [18,19].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Premium subsidies are generally available for Americans who make less than 400% of the federal poverty level, meaning that those in higher income categories may be ineligible for financial assistance [ 27 ]. Furthermore, Black and Hispanic individuals with cancer experience higher levels of financial toxicity related to their cancer compared to Whites [ 28 ]. This lack of health insurance premium assistance for those just above income thresholds combined with racial/ethnic disparities in financial toxicity may result in issues paying initial policy premiums, resulting in denial of coverage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%