| Literature DB >> 33282212 |
Elizabeth Hyde, Margaret E Greene, Gary L Darmstadt.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33282212 PMCID: PMC7688061 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.10.020313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
The impact of time poverty on women’s health and economic prospects*
| Time poverty promotes self-neglect | • Limited discretionary time due to a large caregiving burden can prevent women from seeking their own medical care [S1]. In 2017, 24% of American women reported delaying or not obtaining health care because they could not find time, and 14% cited trouble finding child care [S2]. |
| • In a study of HIV patients in the United States, being female and having a child in the household were both predictors of delaying HIV care due to caregiving [S3]. | |
| • Among pregnant South African women, daily chores such as fetching water and fieldwork have been shown to decrease use of prenatal care [S4]. | |
| • Among pregnant women in Benin, educational attainment and being employed – which require sufficient time – were associated with increased utilization of maternal health care [S5]. | |
| Time poverty prevents women from earning money, which can limit their ability to pay for health care | • In a study of rural Bangladeshi women, a lack of income-generating activity was associated with increased delay in seeking emergency obstetric care [S6]. |
| Time poverty curtails women's educational opportunities and capabilities for enagaging with health systems | • A study of Aboriginal women in Manitoba found that caregiving responsibilities were a significant barrier to academic progress [S7]. |
| Time poverty results in poorer food choices, less exercise, and more stress | • Time poverty promotes unhealthy eating habits and decreased exercise [ |
| • A 2017 study found that American fathers engaged in leisure activities 47% and 35% of the time during which mothers did childcare and housework, respectively [S10]. | |
| • Caregiving can also be mentally and physically taxing. Among American women caring for adult relatives, mental health is worse than national norms [S11]. Grandmothers who take significant caregiving roles for their grandchildren have been to shown to suffer increased stress compared to non-caregiving counterparts [S1]. | |
| Unpaid responsibilities limit women's engagement in the workforce | • Worldwide, three-quarters of men and one half of women are part of the paid labor force [S12]. In 2015, <30% of women in Northern Africa, Western Asia, and Southern Asia worked for pay [S12]. |
| • Unpaid caregiving duties are a significant barrier to employment, particularly for mothers. In 2013, American mothers were almost three times as likely as fathers to report quitting their jobs at some point for family reasons [S13]. | |
| • Male-dominated occupations often require long hours with little flexibility, which does not accommodate caregiving responsibilities [S14]. Mothers in these fields were 52% more likely to quit than other women if they worked ≥50 hours per week. | |
| • In the United States, 69% of unpaid caregivers to elderly adults are women [S15]. Daughters and daughters-in-law are more likely than other caregivers to reduce their work hours to care for ageing parents [S16]. | |
| Women in the paid workforce are funneled into lower-paid occupations with fewer protections | • Female-dominated professions such as teaching, administrative services, and food production tend to pay less than male-dominated jobs, even when they require the same skill level [S17]. They reflect women’s lower educational attainment, limited mobility, discrimination by employers, normative choices, and the necessity of part-time work to accommodate domestic work [S18]. The same trends are seen in the health sector, where “women care and men cure” [S19]. |
| • Women tend to occupy lower levels and be paid less than men working in the same industries. For example, in the Canadian food service industry in 2015, 60% of chefs were male, while 72% of kitchen helpers were female [S20]. Women are under-represented in high-paid sectors like technical and business services [S18,S21,S22]. | |
| • Lower-paid roles tend to offer poorer working conditions and be excluded from social protection programs designed to reduce social and economic vulnerability [S22,S23,S24]. | |
| • In the Middle East, legal coverage for employment injury is 18 percentage points lower for women than overall coverage rates [S25]. | |
| Gender segregation in the workplace persists due to overt and subtle harassment and discrimination | • The decline in occupational segregation by gender in the United States has significantly slowed in recent decades, regardless of the education level required for the work [S26]. In 2018, only 7.2% of American women worked full-time in male-dominated (≥75% male) fields [S27]. |
| • Male-dominated occupations are often hostile environments for women and have the highest rates of gender-based harassment [S28,S29]. Women majoring in majority-male fields face significantly more gender harassment than women in other majors [S30]. | |
| • Discrimination on hiring and promoting men over women is pervasive in finance and STEM fields, limiting women's advancement and reinforcing gender-based occupational segregation [S29,S31,S32]. | |
| • 37% of women who work mostly with men report that they have been treated as if they were incompetent because of their gender, compared to 18% of women in gender-balanced workplaces [S29]. | |
| Women are paid less than men for similar work | • Jobs with more women pay less than those with fewer, even when controlling for education level and skills [S33]. In most countries, across all sectors and occupations, women working full-time earn 70%-90% of what men earn doing the same work [S12]. |
| • Women earn less than men in all male-dominated occupations and 18 of the 20 most common occupations for women [S27]. | |
| • Devaluation of women's work has been shown to be a primary driver of the gender wage gap [S33]. The overall pay rate of male-dominated occupations in the United States declined as large numbers of women entered the fields between 1950 and 2000 [S33]. | |
*References are presented in Table S1 in the Online Supplementary Document.