Abstract

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in Western countries with clear socioeconomic differences. Higher occupational class is associated with higher breast cancer incidence but with better survival from the disease, whereas lower occupational class is associated with higher risk of sickness absence. We are not aware of previous studies examining changes over time in occupational class differences in sickness absence due to breast cancer. This paper focuses on occupational class differences in the incidence and duration of sickness absence due to breast cancer over the period of 2005–2013. Age-adjusted occupational class differences in the cumulative incidence and duration of sickness absence due to breast cancer were calculated utilising a nationally representative 70% random sample of employed Finnish women aged 35–64 years (yearly N varying between 499,778 and 519,318). The results show that higher occupational class was associated with higher annual cumulative incidence of sickness absence due to breast cancer. Lower occupational class was associated with longer duration of absence. Occupational class differences in both cumulative incidence and duration of absence remained broadly stable. As a conclusion, these results suggest that measures should be targeted particularly to promotion of work capacity among employees with breast cancer in lower occupational classes.

Highlights

  • Abundant evidence indicates that occupational class, alongside with education and income, is among the most robust social determinants of health and disease [1,2]

  • The main findings of the study are summarised as follows: (1) Higher occupational class was associated with higher cumulative incidence of sickness absence due to breast cancer across occupational classes throughout the study period

  • (3) Occupational class differences in both cumulative incidence and duration of absence remained broadly stable during the study period

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Summary

Introduction

Abundant evidence indicates that occupational class, alongside with education and income, is among the most robust social determinants of health and disease [1,2]. As for breast cancer, the pattern appears divergent. Higher occupational class is consistently associated with higher breast cancer incidence [3,4,5], a more affluent occupational position tends to be related with better survival from the disease [4]. Breast cancer is the most common cancer among working-age women in both developed and developing countries [6], giving rise to notable costs [7]. There has been an increase in breast cancer incidence in Europe in the recent decades [8]. In Finland, breast cancer incidence is currently 93.95

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