Informing the development of multidisciplinary interventions to help breast cancer patients return to work: a qualitative study

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Martin, Elise | Di Meglio, Antonio | Menvielle, Gwenn | Arvis, Johanna | Bourmaud, Aurélie | Michiels, Stefan | Pistilli, Barbara | Vaz-Luis, Ines | Dumas, Agnès

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag (Germany) -

International audience. Purpose: Return to work (RTW) after breast cancer (BC) can be a major challenge for patients. Multidisciplinary interventions seem to be effective but the role of digital solutions is under-developed and therefore not evaluated. We explored the preferences, needs, and barriers regarding RTW interventions, including opinions about the use of digital approaches to deliver such interventions.Methods: We conducted a qualitative study based on interviews with 30 patients with BC and 18 healthcare providers in four French regions. Emergent themes were identified using thematic content analysis.Results: Most providers declared that they did not proactively address RTW with patients, mainly due to having other priorities and a lack of knowledge. The following themes emerged: several development and deployment barriers regarding RTW interventions exist, multidisciplinary interventions are preferred, and there is a need to maintain contact between the patient and workplace during sick leave, including pathways and interlocutors that can facilitate RTW. Participants had mostly positive representations of using digital tools to facilitate RTW; however, fear of loss of human contact and the exacerbation of inequalities were identified as possible risks associated with the development of digital-only interventions.Conclusions: Interventions blending the needs and preferences of patients with BC and the healthcare system are warranted. A personalized multimodal approach with mixed digital and in-person features has surfaced as a possible solution to address the weaknesses of existing interventions.Implications for cancer survivors: Since most women work at the time of diagnosis, it is of particular relevance to build interventions promoting RTW.

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