Elizabeth Sherer, MPH
Global Health, Benefits and Wellbeing, Mercer Marsh Benefits
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United States
Imagine Sarah, a 50-year-old accountant working for a multinational company. She has been diagnosed with breast cancer. Her cancer journey will be influenced by several factors, including the country where she lives and the benefits she might have through her job.
For example:
In both scenarios, Sarah’s odds of positive medical outcomes will vary based on when her disease is diagnosed and how it is treated and managed. Likewise, her odds of maintaining her financial health will vary based on a number of factors, including: the cost of her care; the impact of her disease and treatment on her ability to work; and the supplemental benefits and leave policies provided by public provisions and her employer. Regardless of where she lives, Sarah’s cancer experience will be mediated by the practical supports her job may provide her, including medical benefits, access to paid leave, flexible working, and social support networks.
Cancer cases are on the rise globally; a 77% increase in cancer diagnosis is expected over the next three decades.3 At the same time, research advances have improved cancer treatment, making intervention options more effective than ever. This duality demands the world —including global employers — redefine strategic short- and long-term cancer care. How can companies support employees like Sarah medically, financially, professionally, and socially? What steps can and should employers take to protect their workforce health and holistic well-being from the ravages of cancer?
Cancer is an employer issue.
There is an association between support at work and positive employee health and well-being.
Employers can support employees with cancer by balancing empathy and economics in total rewards, benefits and organizational culture.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), cancer is a leading cause of death globally: in 2022, there were 20 million new cases and 9.7 million deaths due to cancer, which translates into approximately one death in every nine for men and one in every 12 for women.14 The disease does not respect age: although half of all cancer cases occur in people over the age of 70, cancer is affecting a wider range of age groups and demographics than ever before. Rates are rapidly increasing among younger cohorts in the workforce. Worldwide, the number of cancer cases in those under age 50 are up 80% in the past three decades.15
There is nothing universal about cancer apart from its prevalence. Cancer types and rates vary across regions and demographics including income, race, gender, and sexual orientation. Access to cancer treatment and support also varies widely across regions and demographic groups. There is no one-size-fits-all approach globally to prioritizing cancer action and providing adequate care. Employers need to understand the risk cancer poses to its workforce both globally and locally.
Cancer care itself is ever-more costly and complex. As noted above, the estimated global cost of cancer from 2020 to 2050 is projected to be a staggering $25.2 trillion. Mercer Marsh Benefit’s Health Trends 2024 report cites cancer as a global top cause of claims costs in 2022. New data and technologies in cancer prevention, diagnosis and treatment, for example genomic testing, gene therapy, and CAR T-cell therapy will create even greater financial pressures. This confluence of factors means that employers should be strategic in their approach to cancer care, defining global guiding principles for action and locally addressing coverage and gaps where possible.
Setting the human costs aside, cancer impacts the corporate bottom line directly and indirectly.16 Beyond healthcare costs, it may impact both individual careers and wider organizational productivity, affect careers, and demand active management.
Source: Mercer Marsh Benefits
Source: Mercer Marsh Benefits
Addressing cancer in the workforce should focus on ensuring there is adequate support for the employee through all phases of their health journey.
Identifying or detecting cancer is the first line of defense. Strategy considerations should include:
Early and accurate diagnosis can significantly change the outcome for the employee and impact the cost of treatment. Helping employees identify and access the most appropriate providers (as first and second opinions) is key to ensuring the accurate diagnosis and utilization of evidence-based clinical pathways. Globally, look for insurer partners (internationally and locally) that can support these aims.
Population and geographic variations in cancer diagnosis, treatment and mortality underscore the importance of tailored education, comprehensive benefits and culturally and contextually relevant support programs. Disparities should be considered when reviewing benefit plans and programs for inclusivity and health equity and to remove bias. Focusing solely on only the most prevalent cancers may discriminate against specific racial or ethnic minorities or employee groups, not to mention leaving some countries or regions with limited access to needed care.
Steering employees to high-quality care and removing barriers to access is critical as misdiagnosis and incorrect treatment can result in poorer health outcomes. Support employees seeking treatment locally or via a center of excellence by means of intentional and well-considered plan design. This can be accomplished with effective global benefit governance, improved benefit navigation and second medical opinions where appropriate.
Thanks to improved treatments, many now live with cancer as a chronic disease requiring long-term treatment. Cancer survivors may require years of rehabilitative care, lifelong screenings and follow-ups — including recurrence requiring additional treatments and care. This influences medical benefit plan coverage and design.
It’s vital that companies are clear about their local and global obligations (to employees, to communities, to the business and to shareholders) and act on them.
The economic burden of cancer care worldwide is high and continues to grow. This directly impacts employer sponsors of health benefits globally and their existing and projected medical spend. It is vital that companies are clear about their local and global obligations (to employees, to communities, to the business and to shareholders) and act on them.
Patients and their caregivers are all involved in a long-term journey that impacts all aspects of their well-being. Employers have a vested interest in addressing a Total Well-being strategy, as it mediates the relationship an employee has with work, at work and in life. That includes ensuring that benefits, policies, processes and services are defined to support employees with cancer or in recovery from it, as well as the family and/or community directly supporting those employees. Establishing an authentic culture of caring and a safe working environment are first steps to being a relatable and trusted employer.
Source: Mercer Marsh Benefits
Cancer incidence and related spend has and will continue to increase steadily. As the earlier example of Sarah highlights, the supports available can vary dramatically depending on diagnosis, location, demographics and more. As the cancer care landscape rapidly advances, we see evolution in personalized and precision medical treatments, early detection methods and additional practical supports for employees with cancer and their caregivers. Companies globally are recognizing the value of pledging* to create a positive workplace environment that supports impacted employees, and of putting in place a consistent set of supports that help to drive Total Well-being. At the same time, however, companies will need to make tough choices in their approach to medical benefits globally, answering questions of coverage adequacy and sufficiency while constrained by budget limitations. Mercer Marsh Benefits’ global team of clinicians and content specialists can support companies pursuing balance in these potentially divergent goals.
Series: This is part one of a series. Part two ’Practical steps every employer can take to support employees impacted by cancer’ outlines actionable steps companies can take to support employees impacted by cancer.
* The Working with Cancer Pledge launched in 2023 to bring attention to issues people with cancer face in the workplace.
Citations:
1. Mercer. Worldwide Benefit and Employment Guidelines: China. 2024
2. Mercer. Worldwide Benefit and Employment Guidelines: Spain. 2024.
3. World Health Organization. “Global cancer burden growing, amidst mounting need for services.” Feb. 1, 2024.
4. Bray F, Laversanne M, Sung H, Ferlay J, Siegel RL, Soerjomataram I, Jemal A. “Global cancer statistics 2022: GLOBOCAN estimates of incidence and mortality worldwide for 36 cancers in 185 countries.” CA Cancer J Clin. Apr. 4, 2024.
5. Mercer Marsh Benefits. Health Trends 2024.
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13. “Estimate of the Global Economic Cost of the Most Prevalent Cancers in 204 Countries from 2020 to 2050.” ESMO Oncology News. Mar. 13, 2023.
14. Bray F, Laversanne M, Sung H, Ferlay J, Siegel RL, Soerjomataram I, Jemal A. Global cancer statistics 2022: GLOBOCAN estimates of incidence and mortality worldwide for 36 cancers in 185 countries. CA Cancer J Clin. 2024 May-Jun;74(3):229-263.
15. Zhao J, Xu L, Sun J, et al. “Global trends in incidence, death, burden and risk factors of early-onset cancer from 1990 to 2019.” BMJ Oncology. 2023;2.
16. The Economist Intelligence Unit. Cancer in the workplace. February 2017.
17. Mercer Marsh Benefits. Health on Demand 2023.
Global Health, Benefits and Wellbeing, Mercer Marsh Benefits
United States
Global Leader Longevity and Flex, Mercer
United Kingdom