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RESEARCH REVEALS INCREASED ANXIETY AMID WOMEN WITH GYNECOLOGIC CANCER, LOW-INCOME DURING PANDEMIC

WASHINGTON (US): A recent study provides insights on the Covid-19 pandemic’s effects on employment, anxiety and financial distress among women who have gynecologic cancer and low income. The findings are published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. For the study, Y. Stefanie Chen, MD of Weill Cornell Medicine in […]

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RESEARCH REVEALS INCREASED ANXIETY AMID WOMEN WITH GYNECOLOGIC CANCER, LOW-INCOME DURING PANDEMIC

WASHINGTON (US): A recent study provides insights on the Covid-19 pandemic’s effects on employment, anxiety and financial distress among women who have gynecologic cancer and low income.

The findings are published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. For the study, Y. Stefanie Chen, MD of Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City, and her colleagues conducted telephone interviews with 100 women with gynecologic cancer living in New York City who were covered by Medicaid health insurance.

Among the major findings:

1. 31% of patients reported being employed prior to the pandemic, and 21% had a change in employment status due to the pandemic.

2. 50% of patients reported that they felt more financial stress since the start of the pandemic, and 54% reported that they worry about future financial problems due to the pandemic.

3. 49% of patients expressed increased anxiety about cancer since the start of the pandemic, and 83 per cent expressed feeling increased anxiety in general.

Having an income of less than USD 40,000 per year was the most common factor associated with increased financial distress, cancer worry, and anxiety. Early-stage cancer (stage I-II) was also a risk factor for increased financial distress.

“Patients with cancer are already financially vulnerable as many face changes in employment status when they undergo treatment, and also because cancer treatments can become costly as they accrue over time,” said Dr Chen.

“Patients with low income may struggle to prioritise cancer care and treatments over other costs of daily living, especially when they face changes in employment not only due to their cancer diagnosis but also due to the changes in the job market caused by the pandemic,” she added.

WITH ANI INPUTS

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