Cancer Employment Scientific days
PROJECTS
P1 –
Developing tailored work participation interventions using the Stages of Change: perspectives of (occupational) health care providers and cancer survivors
P2 –
Partners of patients with cancer: what are their health- and work-related experiences and supportive care needs?
P3 –
Rare cancer and return to work: experiences and needs of patients and (health care) professionals
P4 –
Experiences and unmet needs of grade 2-4 glioma patients and (health care) professionals regarding (return to) work: The BrainWork study
P5 –
Effectiveness of internet-based cognitive rehabilitation for working cancer survivors: results of a multicenter randomized controlled trial (i-WORC)
P6 –
Breast cancer survivor’s needs compared to perceived management actions in the return-to-work process: a scoping review
P7 –
Interventions for work participation of unemployed or work-disabled cancer survivors: a systematic review
P8 –
Infectious risk prevention, vaccination and return-to-work of cancer patient : PrIDe
P9 –
Work functioning among employees 4 – 12 years beyond cancer diagnosis: the experienced support from different contexts.
P10 –
Knee Performance and Work Participation in Patients with Malignant Bone Tumors receiving Limb-Salvage Surgery with Knee Prosthesis: a Retrospective Single-Center Cohort Study
P11 –
Cancer in adult family members – implications for health, welfare use and labor market participation
P12 –
Experiences and perspectives of patients with advanced cancer regarding work resumption and work retention: a qualitative interview study
P13 –
Cancer survivors and adverse work outcomes: associated factors and supportive interventions – a narrative review of the literature
P14 –
Let’s break down the barriers around cancer and work!
P15 –
I want to work, who can help me? Work (re)integration of persons with disabilities and chronic illness across different welfare states and industrial relations systems
P16 –
Interreg 2 seas “I Know How” – social innovation on Return to work
P17 –
Return to work or retirement: deciding the path after a cancer diagnosis in a country with limited activation measures in policy
P18 –
Cancer and inability to work fulltime: prevalence and associations among work disability claimants
P19 –
“My work makes use of my healthy parts:” The Impact of Cancer on Survivors’ Retention and Return to Work – A Qualitative Analysis
P20 –
Experiences of work for people living with a grade II/III oligodendroglioma: a qualitative study
P21 –
Participatory development of a Serious Game to prepare employees diagnosed with cancer for Return to Work
P22 –
Does access to rehabilitation impact employment rates among cancer survivors?
P23 –
Development and validation of a guide for employers to facilitate return to work and job retention after cancer
P24 –
Care trajectories and return to work in breast cancer survivors: a French population-based cohort study (Constances)
P25 –
Association between patterns of return-to-work trajectories and long-term depressive symptoms among breast cancer survivors
P26 –
Work outcomes of breast cancer survivors who returned to work after treatment: CANTO cohort.
P27 –
Engaging Different Stakeholders in Return to Work after Cancer: A Canadian Experience
P28 –
Experiences of unemployed or work disabled cancer survivors who attempt to return to paid employment: a focus group study
P29 –
Enhancing the return to work of cancer survivors; evaluation of the MiLES intervention targeted at employers
P30 –
Effect of physical activity interventions on return-to-work after cancer: what is the optimal dose needed?
P31 –
Return to work trajectories after breast cancer diagnosis: a mixed-methods study on the French National Healthcare Insurance Database
P32 –
Pilot implementation of MiLES; a web-based intervention targeted at managers with the aim of enhancing the successful return to work of employees with cancer
P33 –
Why and how interventions work to maintain, access or return to work
P34 –
Do changes in health behaviors after cancer diagnosis influence workers’ employability? An analysis on French data
P35 –
Organizational innovation as a lever for job retention: lessons learned from collaborative action research on job retention after breast cancer
P36 –
Supporting the return to work of cancer survivors: a consensus between managers and cancer survivors to identify appropriate managerial actions
P37 –
On their own: business sustainability and job satisfaction among self-employed cancer survivors
P38 –
E-ONCOGITE: Evaluation of a cognitive therapy adapted to the “Chemobrain” in patients treated for breast cancer
P39 –
A 10-year prospective follow-up of work participation and late effects among cancer survivors in Norway – protocol for the CANWORK II study
P40 –
9 ¾ a tool to regain control on your work with or after cancer
P41 –
Organizational innovation as a lever for job retention: Experience in reconciling chronic illness and work, capitalizing on experiential knowledge and reconfiguring work
P42 –
Translating prognostic factors for return to work and long-term work disability among cancer survivors to the guideline Cancer and Work for occupational and social insurance physicians
P43 –
Systematic review of distress and its consequences among workers diagnosed with cancer
P44 –
Prognostic factors for return to work and long-term work disability among cancer survivors
P45 –
Returning to work after female breast cancer: A qualitative approach from Spain
P46 –
Breast cancer and labour force participation- a prospective cohort study from Norway
P47 –
The evaluation of asbestos risk at urban renewal studies
P48 –
Cohort Study of Workers in the UK Glass-Reinforced Plastics Manufacturing Industry
P49 –
Feasibility of the implementation of a monitoring system of cancer incidence among employees in France. Preliminary results for lung cancer
P50 –
Early detection of prostate cancer in firefighters: a register-based study of prognostic factors and survival
P51 –
Hospital based medical surveillance program for asbestos related lung cancer in Korea
P52 –
A hospital-based case-control study of acute myeloid leukemia in South Korea: Analysis of occupational data investigated by a general hospital surveillance system