Language / La langue: 
Vous êtes ici:   Cancer et travail

Les survivants du cancer Le cancer et le travail : répercussions et stratégies La réduction des capacités de communication

La réduction des capacités de communication

Dr. Christine Maheu, RN, PhD

Dr. Christine Maheu is an Associate Professor in the Ingram School of Nursing, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University. Dr. Maheu is also an Affiliate Scientist at the University Health Network and the University of Toronto. At McGill University, she teaches research methods, supervises graduate students (masters, doctoral, post-doctoral), mentors practicing nurses and students in research, and conducts research in English and French. She has held research awards with the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canadian Cancer Society, and the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer. These awards funded her research in psychosocial oncology, which focuses on developing and testing psychosocial interventions or measurements tools for various cancer populations. Additionally, in partnership with Ipsos Canada and funded by the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, she is co-leading a nationwide survey of the needs of cancer patients for transition care from the end of their treatment to three years after their diagnosis. Dr. Maheu received awards for excellence in nursing research (2013, 2015, 2016) from Ovarian Cancer Canada, the Canadian Association of Nurses in Oncology, and the Quebec Association of Nurses in Oncology.

View all Cancer and Work team members

Ms. Rosemary Cashman

Ms. Rosemary Cashman is a nurse practitioner at the BC Cancer Agency and an Adjunct Professor in the Faculty of Nursing at the University of British Columbia. Her professional experience includes the care of lymphoma, lung cancer and brain cancer patients. She co-chairs the Patient and Family Advisory Council, which guides the brain tumour care program at the BC Cancer Agency. She has authored book chapters and articles related to the care of brain tumour patients and their families. Ms. Cashman was involved in developing and implementing a rapid-access radiotherapy clinic for the palliative treatment of lung cancer and she continues to work in this clinic.

View all advisory board members and expert writers

Kyla Johnson, Occupational Therapist, Segal Cancer Centre, Jewish General Hospital

Ms. Kyla Johnson, M.Sc.A., originally from Edmonton, Alberta, Kyla Johnson works as an Occupational Therapist at the Segal Cancer Center of the Jewish General Hospital. She holds a Master of Science in Occupational Therapy from McGill University. Her goal as a rehabilitation professional in Oncology is to enable people with cancer to be able to do what they want and need to do, in all stages of their cancer experience. Kyla helps develop strategies and accommodations to facilitate a return to meaningful life roles, including work. She is specialized in cancer-related cognitive dysfunction and runs a weekly group teaching strategies to improve daily cognitive functioning. Kyla also leads a volunteer yoga class for young adults with cancer. She lives in Montreal, Quebec.

View all advisory board members and expert writers

Ms. Maureen Parkinson, Vocational Rehabilitation Counsellor, M.Ed. C.C.R.C, BC Cancer

Ms. Maureen Parkinson is the province-wide vocational rehabilitation counsellor at the BC Cancer Agency. She has also been vocational rehabilitation counsellor at a public rehabilitation hospital and vocational rehabilitation consultant to insurance companies and the court system. She has instructed and facilitated Service-Canada-funded programs on job searching and career exploration. Ms. Parkinson has a Masters in Counselling Psychology, is a Canadian Certified Rehabilitation Counsellor, and completed the Certified Return to Work Coordinator Program through the National Institute for Disability Management and Research. She has developed return-to-work and job-search seminars for cancer patients and created the guidebook “Cancer and Returning to Work: A Practical Guide for Cancer Patients” as well as on-line articles about returning to work and school. She also co-authored a paper commissioned by the Canadian Association of Psychosocial Oncology, “Cancer and Work: A Canadian Perspective”.

View all Cancer and Work team members


Le cancer et les traitements associés risquent de limiter la communication avec l’entourage de bien des manières. Le cancer de la tête et le cancer du cou entraînent parfois l’ablation chirurgicale des organes de la parole, comme la langue ou le larynx. Par ailleurs, les tumeurs cérébrales peuvent toucher des régions fonctionnelles du cerveau et compromettre la parole ou la compréhension orale et écrite, ainsi que la lecture.

Conséquences sur le travail

La capacité à communiquer est souvent indispensable au travail, et tout handicap de ce côté peut lourdement compliquer les tâches et les relations de travail, y compris celles associées au rendement.

Les solutions à votre portée

La rééducation peut améliorer ou rétablir les capacités fonctionnelles. Un orthophoniste sera à même de recommander des stratégies pour vous aider à mieux communiquer avec votre famille. Demandez d’autres conseils à votre équipe soignante.

Mesures d’adaptation du lieu de travail

La modification de vos tâches et méthodes de travail :

  • Communiquez par messagerie instantanée ou par clavardage plutôt que par téléphone ou en personne.
  • Pensez à des technologies ou à des moyens de présentation de l’information comme des webinaires, la synthèse de la parole à partir du texte, les vidéos, l’écrit, etc.
  • Informez-vous auprès de votre orthophoniste des appareils de communication utilisables en milieu de travail.
  • Voyez également Accommodation Ideas for Hearing Loss au AskJAN.org.

Suivant :

Retour à la liste des effets secondaires courants des traitements contre le cancer