| Literature DB >> 31057471 |
Peter Kay Chai Tay1, Yi Yuan Ting1, Kok Yang Tan1,2.
Abstract
Men and women exhibit clear differences in occupational choices. The present article elucidates sex differences in terms of formal care occupational choices and care styles based on evolutionary psychological perspectives. Broadly (1) the motivation to attain social status drives male preference for occupations that signals prestige and the desire to form interpersonal affiliation underlies female preference for occupations that involve psychosocial care for people in need; (2) ancestral sex roles leading to sexually differentiated cognitive and behavioral phenotypic profiles underlie present day sex differences in care styles where men are things-oriented, focusing on disease management while women are people-oriented, focusing on psychosocial management. The implications for healthcare and social care are discussed and recommendations for future studies are presented.Entities:
Keywords: care styles; occupation; sex differences; sexual division of labor; sexual strategies theory
Year: 2019 PMID: 31057471 PMCID: PMC6478767 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00867
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Examples of sex differentiated adaptive traits and the predictions for the approach, understanding, and implications of care provision.
| Psychological trait | Adaptive function | Male specific functions | Female specific functions | Examples of studies | Evolutionary psychological based predictions on care provision |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emotional expression | Communicate internal emotions | Display power-oriented emotions of anger, pride, contempt to express dominance an aggressiveness | Display emotions of happiness, sadness, empathetic emotions to express affiliation | Male carers are less likely to display empathetic emotions and may be perceived to be less communicative or caring compared to their female counterparts. When assuming leadership roles, men show expressions of dominance, and aggression more readily when they encounter disagreement with colleagues. Female doctors who express happy or sad emotions more visibly would result in sex-based experience such as having patients assume that they are nurses or therapists. Females more readily display empathetic emotions when they provide care. | |
| Relational expression | Communicate relational intent | Demonstrate dominance | Demonstrate affiliation | Male carers may appear less amicable, prefer leading roles, and less willing to seek opinions. Thus, male doctors will more likely to assume an authoritative stance, provide more advisory suggestions than engaging in same-level interpersonal exchange like information sharing and less likely to probe for patients’ agreeableness to their suggestions. Female carers may appear more communicative and prefer to engage other people in decision making and caregiving activities. Thus, female doctors will be more willing to ask more questions and are more comfortable to discuss personal issues or disclose upsetting news to patients. Compared to their male counterparts, female General Practitioners tend to be found in partnerships than in solo practices. | |
| Interpersonal orientation | Social support | Kin oriented | Non-kin oriented | Males prefer to seek help from family and relatives. Thus, they are less likely to seek social support or share their experiences with colleagues at work. Females may have a wider social support network from friends. Thus, they are more approachable and converse more readily with strangers and colleagues. They tend to share their difficulties at work. | |
| Interpersonal social exchange | Social exchange | Hierarchical coalition, leader-follower | Reciprocal cooperation, nurturing | Males may prefer to adopt leading roles or follower roles, and egalitarian social exchange may be less preferred. Male subordinates perceive duties as assigned roles and would like up tasks that enable them to display their skill sets and gain recognition. Females may prefer reciprocal forms of social exchanges where tasks are evenly shared. Female subordinates perceive duties as assistive roles and prefer tasks that enable them to display greater empathy, and provide emotional and bodily care. | |
| Approach and avoidant tendencies | Self-enhancement, self-protection | Risk taking, competitive, accumulate resources | Cautious, cooperative, retain resources | Males are more competitive and likely take on challenges in seeking prestigious jobs such as physician or surgeon. Females prefer to maintain status quo and avoid confrontational approaches. They operate on tasks such as nursing and social work. | |
| Problem solving tendencies | Resolve physical and mental health problems | Instrumental orientation | Emotional orientation | Male clinicians may deem themselves as emotionally and interpersonally inapt and would likely refer patients to counseling services while female clinicians are more likely to spend more time and effort to discuss about patient’s emotional and interpersonal problems. Males will seek jobs that are problem- or disease-centric and have a potential solution or assigned tasks that enable them to use their skills to solve technical issues. Females will seek jobs that are patient-centric or assigned tasks relating to the caring or management of patient’s emotions. | |