Recent research published by Xuesong Han, PhD, and colleagues in the journal Cancer indicated that during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the proportion of working-aged U.S. adults without health insurance did not change despite increases in unemployment. The prevalence of unhealthy behaviors decreased, regardless of cancer history, and declines in smoking were larger among cancer survivors than nonelderly adults without a cancer history.
Cancer survivors often have high health-care needs and may be vulnerable to the effects of economic and health-care disruptions, such as those that occurred during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. To investigate, Dr. Han, of the American Cancer Society, and colleagues used data from the nationwide, population-based Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System—an annual household telephone survey—to examine changes in multiple health-related measures in 2020 among cancer survivors, comparing them with adults who did not have a history of cancer. Specifically, they assessed health insurance coverage, access to care, employment, health behaviors, and self-reported health.
Xuesong Han, PhD
Among adults aged 18 to 64 years, the uninsured rate did not change significantly in 2020 despite increases in unemployment. The prevalence of unhealthy behaviors, such as insufficient sleep and smoking, decreased in 2020, and self-rated health improved, regardless of cancer history. Declines in smoking were greater among cancer survivors than among adults without a cancer history.
“Our findings suggest that the pandemic may have motivated people to adopt certain healthier behaviors, and national and regional policy responses to the pandemic regarding insurance coverage, unemployment benefits, and financial assistance may have contributed to the observed positive changes,” said Dr. Han. “As policies related to the public health emergency expire, ongoing monitoring of longer-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer survivorship is warranted.”
Disclosure: For full disclosures of the study authors, visit acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com.