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IN GOOD COMPANY?
LIVESTRONG Magazine | Summer 2010
By CURT PESMENFor many survivors, making it through treatment isn't the only major goal: They also have a job to return to—in order to truly heal.
"Don't even think about it," she thought that morning. And then she couldn't help but think about it: her breast cancer diagnosis, the surgery, the chemo, and the fears of a young mother with an infant son and five-year-old daughter. And the impact of that awful year, 2006, flooded back.

Yet on the same day this spring, when Adrienne Ambraziunas, 40, prepped for her callback job interview at There With Care (TWC), a Colorado-based, family service nonprofit agency, it finally hit her: Maybe this was one of the few job openings around in which survivor status might actually help her land the job. She also felt (but didn't see the need to share right away) that her experience fighting cancer would even help her perform her job. After all, the TWC mission is: "Helping children and families facing critical illness." And she was gunning to become a volunteer coordinator — one of the few administrative positions on staff — which helps direct thekinds of care and services that client families receive daily.
Chillingly, Ambraziunas later allows that she had been diagnosed at 36—the exact age as her maternal grandmother, who unfortunately didn't survive to age 40. Unlike her grandmother, Ambraziunas had been tested for the (BRCA) breast cancer genes and so far had been found to be clear of an ominous future. Would all this knowledge and worry crimp her confidence during her interview? It didn't seem to do so that day. The interview went well. Really well.
HOW MUCH DO YOU SHARE?
Of course, survivor interviews and human resources sessions on the job don't always match up well. Especially when you have an unenlightened employer who may view you or your situation as a drain on the company's resources. Fact is: Employees with checkered health histories have had a difficult time changing or obtaining high-quality health insurance. Legislation such as the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, which went into law in 2008 and bars companies from using genetic information in hiring, firing, or promotion decisions, is new enough that even its initial impact is still being weighed. And the full effects of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the health care reform bill signed into law in March, won't be felt for at least a few years, as final pieces of the reform settle into place closer to 2013-14.
It's no wonder, then, that patients and survivors don't always share their diagnoses openly on the job. "I kept information from the company until I had all the facts about the cancer, had my medical team picked, and the treatment options," says Steve Nelson, 46, a Southern California colorectal cancer survivor and real-estate investment analyst. "I had a plan of attack to 'beat the beast' set in motion. This was done to eliminate the judgments and second-guessing of others, my coworkers' opinions, and the 'advice' of others."
While coworkers' intent may often be kindhearted or good-natured, Nelson felt protective of his job, career, and his long-term status as vice-president of a solid, mid-sized company. "It was ultimately up to me to do this," he adds of his delayed, strategic download of his case to his colleagues. When Nelsontalks about the "judgments" of these same colleagues, he is referring to part of the social stigma of cancer diagnoses that remains, even in our technical, supposedly medically savvy society. Otherwise, why would a middle-aged husband, dad, and exec on the West Coast be so hesitant to talk to people he works with every day? Especially about fairly common aspects of his biology that ran amok and attacked his intestines, his colon. In 2010, certain diagnoses, such as lung cancer ("Did he smoke?"), skin cancer ("Didn't she do tanning salons?"), or colorectal cancer ("Was he a vegetarian?/Did he eat a lot of meat?"), are especially apt to act as targets for such stigmatized beliefs.
On a corporate level, the CEO Cancer Gold Standard is a national program that attacks stigma, outmoded beliefs about cancer, and laggard reimbursement or health insurance support for cancer prevention. (It was created and is run by the CEO Roundtable on Cancer, a nonprofit collection of top chief executive officers across the U.S. who join to help relieve the burdens of cancer on organizations and families. The Roundtable was formed in 2001.)
The CEO Roundtable on Cancer announced recently that its CEO Gold Standard) certification now covers more than 1.25 million employees (see "Corporate Cancer Pedigree", below). What's more, CEO Gold Standard hopes to have three million employees covered by firms accredited with the Gold Standard by 2011, according to Bill Weldon, the chairman of Johnson & Johnson, who chairs the CEO Roundtable on Cancer.
In brief, the Gold Standard calls for firms to take actions in five key areas of health to fight cancer in the workplace:
- Discourage smoking
- Encourage fitness in or near the workplace
- Promote healthful eating, nutrition
- Detect cancer at its earliest stages
- Provide access to quality care, including potential clinical trials

