| Literature DB >> 33182437 |
Erica Briones-Vozmediano1,2,3, Natalia Rivas-Quarneti3,4, Montserrat Gea-Sánchez1,2,3, Andreu Bover-Bover5,6, Maria Antonia Carbonero7, Denise Gastaldo3,8.
Abstract
In Spain, most jobs available for Latin American immigrant women are in intimate labour (caregiving and domestic work). This work is usually performed under informal employment conditions. The objective of this study was to explain how the colonial logic mediates the experiences of Latin American women working in intimate labour in Spain, and the effects of such occupation on their health and wellbeing, using a decolonial theoretical framework. A multi-site secondary data analysis of qualitative data from four previous studies was performed utilizing 101 interviews with Latin American immigrant women working as caregivers in Spain. Three interwoven categories show how the dominant colonial logic in Spain creates low social status and precarious jobs, and naturalizes intimate labour as their métier while producing detrimental physical and psychosocial health consequences for these immigrant caregivers. The caregivers displayed several strategies to resist and navigate intimate labour and manage its negative impact on health. Respect and integration into the family for whom they work had a buffering effect, mediating the effects of working conditions on health and wellbeing. Based on our analysis, we suggest that employment, social, and health protection laws and strategies are needed to promote a positive working environment, and to reduce the impact of caregiving work for Latin American caregivers.Entities:
Keywords: Spain; caregiving; economic recession; migration; qualitative research; racism; sexism; social discrimination; working women; workplace
Year: 2020 PMID: 33182437 PMCID: PMC7664865 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17218278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Characteristics of the sample and original studies.
| Characteristic | Study 1 | Study 2 | Study 3 | Study 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geographical zone | Balearic Islands | Balearic Islands | Catalonia | Galicia |
| 51 | 24 | 12 | 14 | |
| Nationality | Colombia | Colombia | Colombia | Bolivia |
| Status | Documented and undocumented | Documented and undocumented | Undocumented | Documented and undocumented |
| Age range | 25–45 | 20–50 | 19–52 | 36–42 |
| Work location | Urban | Urban | Urban and Rural | Urban and Rural |
| Year | 2010–2012 | 2009–2011 | 2011 | 2013–2015 |
| Objectives | To analyze the care work of Latin American women caregivers, their perception of working conditions and their relationships with the people they care for and their families. | To analyze how the Latin American women caregivers in Mallorca are misrecognized and colonialized | To describe access and utilisation of social and healthcare services by undocumented Latin American women working and living in rural and urban areas, and the barriers these women may face | To gain understanding of daily life participation in occupation experiences of Latin American women living in vulnerable situations, and to identify mediators of health and wellbeing in order to propose collaborative actions intended to promote health |
| Methodologies | Qualitative approach underpinned by Social Critical Paradigm | Mix-methods multisite study. Qualitative approach underpinned by Social Critical Paradigm | Qualitative inquiry underpinned by Social Critical Paradigm | Participatory health research study underpinned by Social Critical Paradigm |
Main Self-Reported Health Consequences of Intimate Labour.
| Health Problems | Example |
|---|---|
| Pain | “In my first job, I was really sick because of back pain; I could no longer move very well because I had to move the lady from the bedroom to the bathroom [and] from the bathroom to the living room. I have always been skinny, so I really had a hard time.” (Study 1, Ruth) |
| Fatigue | “A lot [of fatigue] because, as a live-in maid, you have to work like sixteen hours a day; although they give you a one-hour break, when there are small children, you cannot rest unless when the children are resting, and as much as a child is [calm]—he does not… he does not rest—he is always asking for attention, so it is difficult. I ended up exhausted because I was used to more, more movement always outside. I lasted a year and a half, but I left! Phew! More than exhausted.” (Study 1, Alba) |
| Sleep deprivation | “I already feel that I am bleeding from (my nose...) and my health is [deteriorating] because it is 10 times; I get up every night 10 times. Every hour the lady goes to the bathroom and does not pee in her diaper!” (Study 4, Olivia) |
| Skin irritations | “When I use a lot of detergent and such, as they say, [I have to wear] latex gloves with a lot of dust, which irritates my hands a lot, and I only had that since last year, mid-year. And my whole hand starts to itch, it started to itch, and it was so red and my skin became so stiff (…) the itching started in my hands, reached the elbow and now has spread to the thighs and buttocks.” (Study 1, Ruth) |
| Poor nutrition | “I think that my diet here is very bad because I often go to work at nine, and until I get home, I don’t eat. And there are times when I get home at five, four-thirty, and I spend the entire day without eating.” (Study 1, Madrid, M. Carmen) |
| Anxiety and Depression | “I often feel depressed, which I have never felt before.” (Study 1, Rocío) |
| Stress | “I’m a little stressed from being locked up there.” (Study 1, Vanesa) |
| Frustration | “you look for it [better jobs] (…) [because] you would like to move on, but you know you cannot (…) it is frustrating.” (Study 1, Alba) |
| Isolation | “I stopped working with the grandmother because I felt that my confinement was over… What was difficult for me here was the schedule; I felt like a prisoner in the house; it destroyed me…” (Study 2, Mariana) |
Coping Strategies Endured by Latin American Immigrant Women.
| Strategies | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Accepting | “This is what it is. In other words, I knew what I was coming to; I knew that I was not going to work in an office, that I was not going to work in a store, no... I knew that I was coming to clean or whatever! In other words, to work in whatever but within limits… “(Study 2, Mónica) |
| Refusing certain jobs | “…and I can’t do a lot of caregiving work. I have to look at what kind of work. They offer me a job, but I can’t accept it because of my health.” (Study 3, Rosalba) |
| Enduring | ““…that’s why I came to Spain: to work... and if I have to shut up or bite my tongue, then I bite it. Because I have come to this point.” (Study 3, Rosalba) |
| Negotiating with employers | “I told him; when he gave me the new contract, I told him that I was working for him, but that he should give me a day off, because working every day is tiring, so he said yes, that he was going to give me a day off.” (Study 1, Mercedes) |
| Adapting | “because one has to know how to deal with them.” (Study 1, Ruth) |
| Thinking about quitting or changing jobs | “I was thinking, and my friends also asked me, why aren’t you looking for something external? And then I gained courage, and I said, I will look for external work because it was very bad.” (Study 1, Teófila) |
| Quitting | “but I thought, I said, and what about my health? It’s worth more than that money, so I told him, I am going to leave, and I left; I’m very sensitive, I was crying a lot (…) and I realized it when I was working: no, work is not more valuable than my health /…/ but one at least has dignity; I have my dignity and I’m not going to be like that either.” (Study 4, María) |
| Thinking about returning to their countries | “I think you don’t leave because of pride. Because otherwise, one would many times return to one’s country.” (Study 2, Joana) |