Bielefeld Graduate School in History and Sociology (BGHS), Bielefeld University, Universitätsstrasse 25, 33615, Bielefeld, Germany.
Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology - BIPS, Bremen, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Jul 16;20(1):1052. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09139-w.
The pressing demands of work over the years have had a significant constraint on the family and social life of working adults. Moreover, failure to achieve a 'balance' between these domains of life may have an adverse effect on their health. This study investigated the relationship between work-life conflict and self-reported health among working adults in contemporary welfare countries in Europe.
Data from the 6th European Working Conditions Survey 2015 on 32,275 working adults from 30 countries in Europe were analysed. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to examine the associations between work-life balance and self-reported health among men and women. We further used a 2 stage multi-level logistic regression to assess variations in self-reported health among welfare state regimes by gender.
The results showed a strong association between work-life conflict and poor self-reported health among working adults in Europe (aOR = 2.07; 95% CI: 1.93-2.23). However, the magnitude of the effect differed slightly by gender (men: aOR = 1.97; 95% CI: 1.78-2.18 vs women: aOR = 2.23; 95% CI: 2.01-2.47). Furthermore, we found variations in the relationship between work-life conflict and poor self-reported health between welfare states regimes. The association was found to be weaker in the Nordic and Southern welfare states than the Liberal, Conservative, and Central Eastern European welfare states. Although the associations were more consistent among men than women in the Conservative welfare states regime, we found higher associations for women than men in the Southern, Nordic, Liberal, and Central Eastern European welfare states.
This study provides evidence of some variations in the association between work-life conflict and poor self-reported health among men and women across welfare states regimes in Europe. The results demonstrate the need for governments, organizations and policymakers to provide conducive working conditions and social policies for working adults to deal with competing demands from work and family activities.
多年来的工作压力对成年工作者的家庭和社会生活造成了重大限制。此外,未能在这些生活领域之间实现“平衡”可能会对他们的健康产生不利影响。本研究调查了工作生活冲突与当代福利欧洲国家成年工作者自我报告健康之间的关系。
使用来自欧洲 30 个国家的 32275 名成年工作者的 2015 年第六届欧洲工作条件调查的数据进行了分析。使用多变量逻辑回归模型来研究男性和女性中工作生活平衡与自我报告健康之间的关联。我们进一步使用两阶段多水平逻辑回归来评估按性别划分的福利国家制度中自我报告健康的差异。
结果表明,欧洲成年工作者中工作生活冲突与自我报告健康状况不佳之间存在很强的关联(调整后的比值比[aOR]=2.07;95%置信区间[CI]:1.93-2.23)。然而,这种影响的程度因性别略有不同(男性:aOR=1.97;95%CI:1.78-2.18 与女性:aOR=2.23;95%CI:2.01-2.47)。此外,我们发现工作生活冲突与自我报告健康之间的关系在福利国家制度之间存在差异。在北欧和南欧福利国家,这种关联比自由、保守和中东欧福利国家弱。尽管在保守的福利国家制度中,这种关联在男性中比女性更一致,但我们发现,在南欧、北欧、自由和中东欧福利国家中,女性的关联高于男性。
本研究为欧洲福利国家制度中男性和女性之间工作生活冲突与自我报告健康之间的关联存在一些差异提供了证据。结果表明,政府、组织和政策制定者有必要为成年工作者提供有利的工作条件和社会政策,以应对工作和家庭活动之间的竞争需求。