Journal article

Gendered associations between household labour force participation and mental health using 17 waves of Australian cohort data

TL King, Y Taouk, AD LaMontagne, H Maheen, AM Kavanagh

Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | SPRINGER HEIDELBERG | Published : 2021

Abstract

Purpose: There is some evidence that employed women report more time pressure and work-life penalties than employed men and other women; however little is known about whether this exerts a mental health effect. This analysis examined associations between household labour force arrangements (household-employment configuration) and the mental health of men and women. Methods: Seventeen waves of data from the Household Income and Labour Dynamics Survey (2001–2017) were used. Mental health was measured using the Mental Health Inventory (MHI-5). A six-category measure of household-employment configuration was derived: dual full-time employed, male-breadwinner, female-breadwinner, shared part-time..

View full abstract

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by an Australian Research Council Linkage Project-Gender equality in Australia: impact on social, economic and health outcomes (LP 180100035). TLK is supported by a University of Melbourne Early Career Researcher Grant (1858815) and an ARC DECRA Fellowship (DE200100607).