Literature DB >> 16669805

Constructing health and sickness in the context of motherhood and paid work.

Sarah Cunningham-Burley1, Kathryn Backett-Milburn, Debbie Kemmer.   

Abstract

Changes in the labour market, especially the rise in the employment of women (lone or partnered) with children, alongside an increased policy emphasis on work as a component of active citizenship for men and women, have stimulated the development of research examining the balance between work and home. Although sociologists have long been interested in the interface between the spheres of paid work and domestic life, understandings of the subjective experience of health and illness have tended to keep the domains of family and work separate. This paper addresses the construction of health and illness as operating at the interface between the worlds of work and home. Interviews were conducted with 30 mothers in paid work and having primary school aged children; the study was located in Edinburgh, Scotland. Through an analysis of the interview accounts, this paper examines respondents' experiences and constructions of health, sickness and wellbeing in themselves and in their children. Four areas are discussed: respondents' accounts of the effects of caring and providing on their own health; respondents' accounts of the influence of workplace relationships in the construction of sickness; respondents' accounts of negotiating absence for their children's sickness and how they made sense of and defined child sickness. We argue that managing sickness, itself an anticipated but unpredictable event, gives analytical purchase to understanding the values and practices that characterise the interrelationship between work and family life. The intersections of home and work operate powerfully in respondents' constructions of health and sickness, and the analysis demonstrates how these are played out in everyday life, at home and at work.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16669805     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2006.00498.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  2 in total

1.  What happens to work if you're unwell? Beliefs and attitudes of managers and employees with musculoskeletal pain in a public sector setting.

Authors:  Gwenllian Wynne-Jones; Rhiannon Buck; Carol Porteous; Lucy Cooper; Lori A Button; Chris J Main; Ceri J Phillips
Journal:  J Occup Rehabil       Date:  2011-03

2.  "I have surly passed a limit, it is simply too much": women's and men's experiences of stress and wellbeing when living within a process of housework resignation.

Authors:  Lisa Harryson; Lena Aléx; Anne Hammarström
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2016-03-04       Impact factor: 3.295

  2 in total

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