Implications of neighborhood socioeconomic status on work ability among cancer survivors in the UNC cancer Survivorship Cohort.
1/5 보강
[PURPOSE] Work ability is critical for maintaining financial stability, particularly for cancer survivors with limited socioeconomic resources.
APA
Deng YF, Jin M, et al. (2025). Implications of neighborhood socioeconomic status on work ability among cancer survivors in the UNC cancer Survivorship Cohort.. Journal of psychosocial oncology, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/07347332.2025.2596065
MLA
Deng YF, et al.. "Implications of neighborhood socioeconomic status on work ability among cancer survivors in the UNC cancer Survivorship Cohort.." Journal of psychosocial oncology, 2025, pp. 1-16.
PMID
41404709 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[PURPOSE] Work ability is critical for maintaining financial stability, particularly for cancer survivors with limited socioeconomic resources. This study examined the association between neighborhood socioeconomic status (SES) and work ability using UNC Cancer Survivorship Cohort.
[METHODS] Neighborhood SES was assessed using the Yost index linked to enrollment residential address. Work ability was measured self-reported general and composite physical/mental work ability scores, and annual missed workdays. We estimated mean differences and 95% confidence intervals between Yost index quintiles using multivariable linear regression.
[RESULTS] Among 1,326 currently working participants, those in the highest SES quintile (Q5) had higher general and composite physical/mental work ability scores than those in the lowest (Q1). Fewer annual missed workdays in Q5 vs. Q1 were found among subgroups without chemotherapy, with prostate cancer, ≤ 1 year diagnoses, and urban residence.
[CONCLUSION] Higher neighborhood SES may contribute to better work ability among cancer survivors, highlighting vulnerable groups diagnosed at working age.
[METHODS] Neighborhood SES was assessed using the Yost index linked to enrollment residential address. Work ability was measured self-reported general and composite physical/mental work ability scores, and annual missed workdays. We estimated mean differences and 95% confidence intervals between Yost index quintiles using multivariable linear regression.
[RESULTS] Among 1,326 currently working participants, those in the highest SES quintile (Q5) had higher general and composite physical/mental work ability scores than those in the lowest (Q1). Fewer annual missed workdays in Q5 vs. Q1 were found among subgroups without chemotherapy, with prostate cancer, ≤ 1 year diagnoses, and urban residence.
[CONCLUSION] Higher neighborhood SES may contribute to better work ability among cancer survivors, highlighting vulnerable groups diagnosed at working age.
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