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关爱不总是分享:一项探索 COVID-19 遏制措施如何影响欧洲男性和女性的无酬护理工作和心理健康的范围综述。

Caring is not always sharing: A scoping review exploring how COVID-19 containment measures have impacted unpaid care work and mental health among women and men in Europe.

机构信息

Department of Prevention and Evaluation, Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology-BIPS, Bremen, Germany.

Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2024 Aug 30;19(8):e0308381. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308381. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Unpaid care work is mainly performed by women, whose mental health is more affected by caregiving burden and work-family conflict compared to men. COVID-19 containment measures may have exacerbated existing gender inequalities in both unpaid care work and adverse mental health outcomes. This scoping review provides an overview of recent evidence on the impact of COVID-19 containment measures on unpaid care work and mental health for subgroups of caregivers at the intersection of gender and other social differences (e.g., ethnicity, age, class) in Europe.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS

Our study was informed and guided by Arksey and O'Malley's methodological framework. We searched six academic databases (Medline, PsycInfo, Scopus, CINAHL, Social Sciences Abstracts, Sociological Abstracts, ASSIA) and hand-searched the reference lists of selected articles to identify relevant peer-reviewed research articles published between 1 March 2020 and 7 September 2022. In addition, we conducted a grey literature search using Google Scholar and a targeted hand search on known international and European websites. We included studies that reported gender-disaggregated results on unpaid care work and mental health in the context of COVID-19 containment measures in Europe. Two reviewers independently screened all abstracts and full texts for eligibility and extracted the relevant data. The results were synthesised narratively.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Our results suggest a greater gender gap in unpaid care work division and, to a lesser extent, in mental health, which is unfavourable towards women and mothers. Despite this, we see a break in the traditional division of childcare, with fathers taking on a greater role in family work, which makes us optimistic about the division of care work in the post-COVID-19 era. This research also shows that among European women, population groups often understudied, such as women who are single parents, disabled or of colour, have the highest increase in unpaid care work and greatest deterioration in wellbeing.

摘要

简介

无偿护理工作主要由女性承担,与男性相比,女性的心理健康更容易受到护理负担和工作-家庭冲突的影响。新冠疫情防控措施可能加剧了无偿护理工作和不良心理健康结果方面现有的性别不平等。本范围综述提供了欧洲性别和其他社会差异(如种族、年龄、阶层)交叉点的护理人员亚组的新冠疫情防控措施对无偿护理工作和心理健康影响的最新证据概述。

方法和分析

我们的研究以 Arksey 和 O'Malley 的方法框架为依据和指导。我们在六个学术数据库(Medline、PsycInfo、Scopus、CINAHL、Social Sciences Abstracts、Sociological Abstracts、ASSIA)中进行了检索,并对手头选定文章的参考文献进行了手工检索,以确定 2020 年 3 月 1 日至 2022 年 9 月 7 日期间发表的相关同行评审研究文章。此外,我们使用 Google Scholar 进行了灰色文献检索,并在已知的国际和欧洲网站上进行了有针对性的手工搜索。我们纳入了报告性别分类结果的研究,这些研究涉及欧洲新冠疫情防控措施背景下的无偿护理工作和心理健康。两名审查员独立筛选所有摘要和全文的资格,并提取相关数据。结果以叙述方式进行综合。

结果与讨论

我们的结果表明,无偿护理工作分工的性别差距更大,在心理健康方面的差距较小,但对女性和母亲不利。尽管如此,我们看到了儿童保育传统分工的打破,父亲在家庭工作中承担了更大的角色,这让我们对后新冠疫情时代的护理工作分工持乐观态度。这项研究还表明,在欧洲妇女中,一些经常被忽视的群体,如单身母亲、残疾或有色人种妇女,无偿护理工作增加最多,福利恶化最严重。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/a67f/11364293/ca95c5a66d54/pone.0308381.g001.jpg

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