Department of Community Health & Epidemiology, University of Saskatchewan, Health Sciences Building, 107 Wiggins Road, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5E5, Canada.
Int J Equity Health. 2010 Feb 22;9:6. doi: 10.1186/1475-9276-9-6.
A large body of international research reveals that single mothers experience poorer mental health than their partnered counterparts, with socioeconomic disadvantage identified as an important contributory factor in understanding this health disparity. Much less research, however, has focused specifically on the psychological well-being of single mothers who are employed, despite their growing presence in the labor force. Of the research which has considered employment, the focus has been on employment status per se rather than on other important work-related factors which may impact psychological health, such as psychosocial work quality and work-family conflict. The aim of this study was to: (1) compare employed single mothers and employed partnered mothers on measures of psychological distress, psychosocial work quality and work-family conflict; and (2) explore the potential role of work-family conflict and psychosocial work quality as explanations for any observed differences in psychological distress based on partner status.
Analysis of data obtained from a cross-sectional telephone survey of employed parents in a mid-sized Western Canadian city. Analyses were based on 674 employed mothers (438 partnered and 236 single), who were 25-50 years old, with at least one child in the household.
Compared to employed single mothers, employed partnered mothers were older, had more education and reported fewer hours of paid work. Single mothers reported higher levels of psychological distress, financial hardship, work-family conflict and poor psychosocial work quality. Statistical adjustment for income adequacy, psychosocial work quality and work-family conflict each independently resulted in single motherhood no longer being associated with psychological distress.
While single employed mothers did experience higher levels of psychological distress than their partnered counterparts, differences between these groups of women in income adequacy, psychosocial work quality, and work-family conflict were found to explain this relationship. Future research employing a longitudinal design and subject to lower selection biases is required to tease out the interrelationship of these three life strains and to point to the most appropriate economic and social policies to support single mothers in the workforce.
大量国际研究表明,单身母亲的心理健康状况不如有伴侣的女性,社会经济劣势被认为是理解这种健康差距的一个重要因素。然而,很少有研究专门关注有工作的单身母亲的心理健康,尽管她们在劳动力中越来越多。在已经考虑到就业的研究中,重点是就业本身,而不是其他可能影响心理健康的重要工作相关因素,如心理社会工作质量和工作家庭冲突。本研究的目的是:(1)比较有工作的单身母亲和有工作的已婚母亲在心理困扰、心理社会工作质量和工作家庭冲突方面的差异;(2)探讨工作家庭冲突和心理社会工作质量作为解释基于伴侣状况的心理困扰差异的潜在作用。
对加拿大中西部一个中等城市的在职父母进行横断面电话调查所获得的数据进行分析。分析基于 674 名有工作的母亲(438 名有伴侣,236 名单身),年龄在 25-50 岁之间,家中至少有一个孩子。
与有工作的单身母亲相比,有工作的已婚母亲年龄更大,受教育程度更高,工作时间也更短。单身母亲报告的心理困扰、经济困难、工作家庭冲突和较差的心理社会工作质量水平更高。对收入充足程度、心理社会工作质量和工作家庭冲突进行统计调整后,单身母亲与心理困扰之间的关联不再显著。
虽然有工作的单身母亲确实比有伴侣的单身母亲经历了更高水平的心理困扰,但这些群体的女性在收入充足程度、心理社会工作质量和工作家庭冲突方面的差异解释了这种关系。需要进行采用纵向设计和受到较低选择偏差影响的未来研究,以梳理这三种生活压力的相互关系,并指出支持单身母亲就业的最合适的经济和社会政策。