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Issue title: Gender, Work Schedules and Work/Family Regulations
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Doniol-Shaw, Ghislaine | Lada, Emmanuelle
Affiliations: Laboratoire Techniques, Territoires et Sociétés, Unité mixte de recherche CNRS 8134, University of Paris-Est, Paris, France | Centre en Etudes Genre LIEGE, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Note: [] Address for correspondence: Ghislaine Doniol-Shaw, Latts, Ecole des Ponts- ParisTech, 6-8 avenue Blaise Pascal, Cité Descartes, 78100, Marne-La-Vallée, cedex 2, France. Tel.: +33 (0)1 64 15 38 31; Fax: +33 (0)1 64 61 60 71; E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: Objective: Like most Western countries, France is faced with rapid changes in how social welfare and care regimes are being organized. Home care for the elderly has been closely affected by such trends. This study will analyse the consequences of such developments on work schedules and working conditions of female home care workers. Methods: We carried out 55 biographical interviews with experienced female home care workers employed by six associations as well as 13 interviews with representatives of those associations. Results: The findings reveal an increase in time pressure linked to a reduction in care time per care recipient as well as the fragmentation of care work. These conditions negatively affect the provision of quality care as well as care workers' physical and mental well-being and blur the distinction between workers' professional and home lives. Conclusions: The negative impacts observed call for a change in perspective in relation to how home care work for fragile, elderly people is organized. Our research bears out the necessity of drawing on the experience of the most highly-qualified care workers and entrusting them with the autonomy needed to manage the care time allotted to each care recipient.
Keywords: Home paid care, time constraints, work organization, occupational health, work-life balance, gendered division of work
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2011-1266
Journal: Work, vol. 40, no. Supplement 1, pp. 31-46, 2011
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