‘Beyond Cancer’ Rehabilitation Program to Support Breast Cancer Survivors to Return to Health, Wellness and Work: Feasibility Study Outcomes

Author:

Sheppard Dianne M.1ORCID,O’Connor Moira2ORCID,Jefford Michael345ORCID,Lamb Georgina6,Frost Dorothy6,Ellis Niki7,Halkett Georgia K. B.8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Monash University Accident Research Centre, Monash University, Building 70, 21 Alliance Lane, Clayton 3800, Australia

2. School of Population Health, Curtin University, Kent St, Bentley 6102, Australia

3. Department of Health Services Research, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, 305 Grattan St, Melbourne 3000, Australia

4. Australian Cancer Survivorship Centre, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, 305 Grattan St, Melbourne 3000, Australia

5. Sir Peter MacCallum Department of Oncology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville 3010, Australia

6. IPAR Rehabilitation, 485 La Trobe St, Melbourne 3000, Australia

7. Healthy Working Lives Research Group, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Level 2, 533 St Kilda Road, Melbourne 3004, Australia

8. Curtin School of Nursing/Curtin Health Innovation Research Institute, Curtin University, Kent St, Bentley 6102, Australia

Abstract

More women are returning to work following breast cancer treatment. Our team designed ‘Beyond Cancer’, a multimodal rehabilitation program to support breast cancer survivors to return to work. This study aimed to determine the feasibility of the intervention from the breast cancer survivor, employer and occupational rehabilitation provider perspectives. The feasibility design focused on implementation, acceptability and preliminary indications of efficacy. Primary outcome measures included work status, work capacity and perceived support at work. Responses were compared with an historical usual care group of mixed cancer survivors. The tailored intervention was delivered over 33 weeks (on average) by trained occupational rehabilitation consultants. Eighty-four women with breast cancer (mean age = 50.8 years, SD = 8.24) who were unable to work in their pre-diagnosis capacity for >3 months participated. Results provided preliminary indications of efficacy for primary work outcomes, including work capacity relative to the historical usual care group, and some secondary biopsychosocial variables (physical fatigue, return to work expectations). The intervention was acceptable, demonstrated strong participant engagement and high satisfaction. Feasibility has been demonstrated for this multimodal intervention focused on returning to sustainable work for women with breast cancer. Future research is required with people diagnosed with other cancer types to demonstrate broader implementation.

Funder

National Breast Cancer Foundation Investigator Initiated Research Scheme

wissRe (pilot funds) and AIA Australia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference54 articles.

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4. Cancer survival in Europe 1999–2007 by country and age: Results of EUROCARE-5-a population-based study;Sant;Lancet Oncol.,2014

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