Employment adjustment and mental health of employed family caregivers in Canada

被引:16
作者
Li, Lun [1 ]
Lee, Yeonjung [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calgary, Fac Social Work, Calgary, AB, Canada
关键词
Family caregiving; employment adjustment; role conflict; mental health; workplace support; ROLE-CONFLICT; PHYSICAL HEALTH; MULTIPLE ROLES; COMBINING WORK; INFORMAL CARE; ROLE OVERLOAD; PARENT CARE; ROLE STRAIN; ELDER CARE; PAID WORK;
D O I
10.1080/13607863.2019.1647136
中图分类号
R592 [老年病学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 100203 ;
摘要
Family caregivers make employment adjustment to fulfill caregiving responsibility. However, the studies on the family caregivers' mental health outcomes associated with their employment adjustment are limited. This study utilized the role theory and stress process model of caregiving to examine the relationship between employment adjustment and mental health outcomes among family caregivers, and to test family-to-work role conflict as a mediator and workplace support as a moderator in this relationship. Data (n = 1,696) were drawn from the 2012 Canada General Social Survey: Caregiving and Care Receiving. Findings suggest that employment adjustment is significantly associated with negative mental health outcomes including worse self-rated mental health and higher life stress level. In addition, family-to-work role conflict mediates between employment adjustment and mental health outcomes, with the mediating effect as significant at all levels of workplace support and as weak with increasing workplace support. The findings highlight the role of family-to-work role conflict in understanding the influence of employment adjustment on family caregiver's mental health, and the implication of workplace support on promoting caregiver-friendly workplace culture to alleviate family-to-work role conflict thereby resulting in better mental health outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:2073 / 2081
页数:9
相关论文
共 87 条
[51]   The Psychological Well-Being of Disability Caregivers: Examining the Roles of Family Strain, Family-to-Work Conflict, and Perceived Supervisor Support [J].
Li, Andrew ;
Shaffer, Jonathan ;
Bagger, Jessica .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 20 (01) :40-49
[52]  
Lilly Meredith B, 2011, Healthc Policy, V7, P23
[53]  
LIN E, 2016, MEASURING FAMILY FRI
[54]   Work Impact and Emotional Stress Among Informal Caregivers for Older Adults [J].
Longacre, Margaret L. ;
Valdmanis, Vivian G. ;
Handorf, Elizabeth A. ;
Fang, Carolyn Y. .
JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY SERIES B-PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, 2017, 72 (03) :522-531
[55]   Coping With Work-Family Conflict: A Leader-Member Exchange Perspective [J].
Major, Debra A. ;
Morganson, Valerie J. .
JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 16 (01) :126-138
[56]   Juggling parent care and employment responsibilities: The dilemmas of adult daughter caregivers in the workforce [J].
Martire, LM ;
Stephens, MAP .
SEX ROLES, 2003, 48 (3-4) :167-173
[57]   A longitudinal examination of role overload and work-family conflict: The mediating role of interdomain transitions [J].
Matthews, Russell A. ;
Winkel, Doan E. ;
Wayne, Julie Holliday .
JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2014, 35 (01) :72-91
[58]   Advancing measurement of work and family domain boundary characteristics [J].
Matthews, Russell A. ;
Barnes-Farrell, Janet L. ;
Bulger, Carrie A. .
JOURNAL OF VOCATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2010, 77 (03) :447-460
[59]   Home-to-job and job-to-home spillover: The impact of company policies and workplace culture [J].
Mennino, SF ;
Rubin, BA ;
Brayfield, A .
SOCIOLOGICAL QUARTERLY, 2005, 46 (01) :107-135
[60]   Combining care work and paid work - Do workplace policies make a difference? [J].
Pavalko, EK ;
Henderson, KA .
RESEARCH ON AGING, 2006, 28 (03) :359-374