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After Cancer in the Military: What Happens After Long-term Sick Leave

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clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05235022
Is a
‌
Clinical study
0

Clinical Study attributes

NCT Number
NCT052350220
Health Conditions in Trial
Cancer
Cancer
0
Trial Recruitment Size
170
Clinical Trial Start Date
March 3, 2022
0
Primary Completion Date
July 29, 2022
0
Study Completion Date
July 29, 2022
0
Clinical Trial Study Type
Observational0
Observational Clinical Trial Type
Case-Only0
Observational Study Perspective
Prospective0
Official Name
After Cancer in the Military: What Happens After Long-term Sick Leave0
Last Updated
May 3, 2023
0
Study summary

In recent decades, early diagnosis and improved treatment have led to increased survival for most people with cancer. This improved survival has led to more attention being paid to the quality of life of these people, and to their reintegration into social and professional life. In France, 3.8 million people are treated or in remission from cancer in 2017. Among the 400,000 new patients diagnosed with cancer each year in France, 160,000 (40%) are in professional activity. Cancer treatments induce after-effects that can be felt several months or even years after the diagnosis and have an impact on life. In a study of patients in remission from cancer at 12 months after diagnosis, 47 to 53% of patients had changed jobs or stopped working. In another Finnish study, 26% of patients had decreased physical ability and 19% had decreased mental ability to work five years after cancer diagnosis. In France, studies that have evaluated the impact of cancer on employment and the factors associated with return to work after cancer are still rare: the VICAN study showed that among people in work at the time of diagnosis, 20% were no longer working five years later. With an estimated annual incidence of approximately 400 new cancers per year, the military population is also affected by cancer. Professional reintegration after cancer is of particular concern to the military. The specificity and requirements of the military condition can indeed make this reintegration more difficult. Regular or even intense physical activity is indeed essential but can be difficult after undergoing anti-cancer treatments. Moreover, external operations and many activities are conditioned by the obtaining of medical skills, which are sometimes incompatible with the state of health of patients recently treated for a neoplastic pathology. The studies previously carried out concerning the professional future after cancer do not seem to us to be transposable to the military population. To our knowledge, no study has evaluated occupational reintegration in military personnel after cancer. The aim of this study is to evaluate the difficulties encountered during the post-cancer professional reintegration of military personnel in terms of fatigue, aptitude and advancement, in order to anticipate them and possibly remedy them. The identification of these difficulties will eventually allow to anticipate them and possibly to remedy them via an adapted post-cancer professional reintegration pathway.

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