1. The importance of workplace accommodation for cancer survivors - The role of flexible work schedules and psychological help in returning to work
- Author
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Christophe Kolodziejczyk, Jacob Ladenburg, Anna Kollerup, and Eskil Heinesen
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Ability to work ,Employment ,Schedule ,business.industry ,Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous) ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Work experience ,language.human_language ,Danish ,Return to Work ,Work (electrical) ,Cancer Survivors ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,language ,Humans ,Seniority ,business ,Psychology ,Workplace ,Accommodation - Abstract
We investigate whether accommodating job attributes influence the probability of returning to work three years after a cancer diagnosis. Using a combination of Danish administrative data and a survey carried out among Danish breast, colon, and melanoma skin cancer survivors, we find that the probability of returning to work is significantly and positively correlated with a flexible work schedule during and after cancer treatment. The result is robust when controlling for pre-cancer work experience, job seniority, pre-cancer job dissatisfaction, and post-cancer ability to work. Furthermore, we show that the influence of a flexible schedule varies with respect to cancer survivors’ ability to work, level of education, and type of cancer.
- Published
- 2020