Global and Community Mental Health Research Group, Faculty of Social Sciences (E21), Psychology Department, University of Macau, Avenida da Universidade, Taipa, Macau, SAR, People's Republic of China.
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2019 Feb 23;19(1):229. doi: 10.1186/s12889-019-6552-4.
Overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) comprise one of the largest populations of migrant workers globally. Within China, they represent the largest group of imported domestic workers. Little is known about their working conditions or how this might affect their health and wellbeing.
This qualitative study explored the working conditions and risk factors for poor health in a sample of temporary female Filipino domestic workers in Macao, China. Focus group discussions with female domestic workers (n = 22) and in-depth interviews with key informants (n = 7) were conducted.
Domestic workers reported physical (e.g., hypertension, chronic pain, diabetes, poor sleep), and mental health problems (depression, anxiety), and addictive behaviors (gambling, alcohol misuse), along with significant structural, linguistic, financial, and cultural barriers to healthcare access to address these concerns. Adverse working conditions including poor treatment and abuse by employers, lack of privacy and inadequate sleeping areas in employers' homes or in crowded boarding houses, language barriers, inadequate and poor enforcement of labor protections, and discrimination. Domestic workers also cited exorbitant agency fees and remittances causing significant financial stress. Kinship network ties with family members back home were fraught with infidelity, difficulty parenting, misuse of remittances, and family misconceptions of domestic workers' situation abroad. Lack of quality social support and peer social networks exacerbated these conditions.
In this sample of Filipino migrant domestic workers, stressors experienced within the host country were commonly reported. Indebtedness and low salaries limits social mobility. Psychosocial and policy-level interventions are needed to improve the health and wellbeing of this population of migrant women.
菲律宾海外务工人员(OFWs)是全球最大的移民工人群体之一。在中国,他们是最大的输入家政工人群体。他们的工作条件以及这些条件如何影响他们的健康和福祉,人们知之甚少。
本定性研究探索了在澳门的临时菲律宾女性家政工人样本中的工作条件和健康不良的风险因素。对女性家政工人(n=22)进行了焦点小组讨论,并对关键信息提供者(n=7)进行了深入访谈。
家政工人报告了身体方面(如高血压、慢性疼痛、糖尿病、睡眠不佳)和心理健康问题(抑郁、焦虑),以及成瘾行为(赌博、酗酒),以及在获得医疗保健方面存在显著的结构、语言、财务和文化障碍来解决这些问题。不良的工作条件包括雇主的不良待遇和虐待、雇主家中或拥挤的寄宿处缺乏隐私和不足的睡眠区、语言障碍、劳动保护不足和执行不力,以及歧视。家政工人还提到代理费用过高和汇款导致的巨大经济压力。与国内家人的亲属关系网络充满了不忠、育儿困难、汇款滥用以及家人对家政工人在国外处境的误解。缺乏高质量的社会支持和同伴社交网络加剧了这些情况。
在本菲律宾移民家政工人样本中,报告了在东道国经历的压力源。负债和低工资限制了社会流动性。需要进行心理社会和政策层面的干预,以改善这一移民妇女群体的健康和福祉。