Literature DB >> 1464717

Women and mental health: the interaction of job and family conditions.

M C Lennon1, S Rosenfield.   

Abstract

Current research on the effects of wives' employment on their well-being focuses on the determinants of those effects. Most studies have used a gender model that concentrates on family conditions as mediators. In contrast, studies of the effects of employment on men typically use a job model and focus on work rather than family conditions as determinants. To understand fully the impact of employment on women, these models should be combined. We predict that certain work and family conditions interact, specifically, that the degree of control at work moderates the effects of demands in the family. Using two data sets on community mental health, we have found some support for this hypothesis.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1464717

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Soc Behav        ISSN: 0022-1465


  18 in total

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7.  Struck by lightning or slowly suffocating - gendered trajectories into depression.

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8.  The mental health benefits of work: do they apply to welfare mothers with a drinking problem?

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9.  Secular trends in cardiovascular risk factors with a 36-year perspective: observations from 38- and 50-year-olds in the Population Study of Women in Gothenburg.

Authors:  Cecilia Björkelund; Dominique Andersson-Hange; Kate Andersson; Calle Bengtsson; Ann Blomstrand; Dorota Bondyr-Carlsson; Gabriele Eiben; Kerstin Rödström; Agneta Sjöberg; Valter Sundh; Lilian Weman; Dimitri Zylberstein; Magnus Hakeberg; Lauren Lissner
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10.  The mental health effects of multiple work and family demands. A prospective study of psychiatric sickness absence in the French GAZEL study.

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