Women with a low level of education perceive themselves as having worse health than men do. This was shown in a recent study comparing women's and men's health and work conditions.
"Women are subject to entirely different kinds of stress and strain in both paid and unpaid work than men are. This is partly because of the gender-segregated labour market and the unequal distribution of work in the family," says Raymond Dahlberg, a doctoral student at the Swedish National Institute for Working Life.
In this thesis, low-educated women’s health and conditions at work and at home were examined. The overall aim was to gain a deeper understanding of low-educated women’s conditions at work and in the domestic sphere, and how this affects their health. Methods used were questionnaires, interviews, observations and direct measurement.
The empirical basis was women and men working in the county of Östergötland. Four studies have been conducted. Each study has its own approach regarding methods and subjects.
The first study was a cross-sectional population-based study including 3,831 gainfully employed women and men. The aim was to study differences in health and exposures between women and men with the same length of education. In the second study women and men performing the same type of work tasks were compared regarding work technique and the prevalence of musculoskeletal symptoms. It was conducted at an industry and included 55 blue-collar workers. The third study was an intervention study that aimed to examine the physical and psychosocial working conditions among a group of female hot food distributors. Their conditions were compared with other women in traditionally heavy work within the same work unit and improved work conditions were suggested. The fourth and final study had an exploratory approach combined with questionnaire data and measurements of aerobic capacity. The aim was to look for factors that are associated with self-rated good health outside the paid work in low-educated, gainfully employed, older women.
The results of the studies can be summarised as follows:
Women with the same length of education as men are differently exposed in both paid and unpaid work, due to the segregated labour market and the unequal distribution of domestic duties. Low-educated women reported a higher prevalence of musculoskeletal symptoms in most body parts compared with low-educated men. Compared with high-educated women, low-educated women reported worse health in nearly all measured health indicators.
Even when women and men performed the same type of work tasks, more women than men reported a higher prevalence of musculoskeletal symptoms, especially in the shoulders. Besides differences in work technique, which can partly be explained due to the design of working heights and tools at the workplace, there were also differences in time spent on home and household work. The women spent significantly more time on household and maintenance work than the men.
Ergonomic measurement methods of physical working conditions and structured interviews to measure the psychosocial working conditions proved to be useful methods to detect the difficult working conditions for women in typical female occupations. Organisational intervention that aimed to reduce and redistribute the physical and psychosocial.
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