Childhood Cancer Survivors Often Struggle In Adult Workplace

Childhood Cancer Survivors Often Struggle In Adult Workplace

Andrew Flaton survived a brain tumor as a child, but he still suffers from the effects of his cancer treatments. One of his most challenging tasks: holding down a job.

He was left almost entirely deaf after undergoing chemotherapy. He can't work more than four hours a day without feeling exhausted, and he often suffers from panic attacks, which he struggles to keep under control. The 25-year-old Oakville, Mo., resident earns less than $700 a month and lives with his grandparents, and the longest period he has spent in one job -- doing part-time filing work for an anesthesiologist -- is two years.

Before landing his current job as a retail clerk, Mr. Flaton was unemployed for a year. He filled out close to two dozen job applications without receiving any calls for an interview. "It was very difficult to find an employer who was accepting of what I could and could not do," he says.

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