Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T23:23:46.209Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Masked Symptoms: Mid-life Women, Health, and Work*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2010

Zelda Abramson*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, Acadia University
*
Requests for offprints should be sent to: / Les demandes de tirés-à-part doivent être adressées à : Zelda Abramson, Ph.D., Department of Sociology, Acadia University, Wolfville, NS B4P 2R6. ([email protected])

Abstract

Data from the Canadian Labour Force Survey (1997) reveal that relatively few mid-life women offer ill health as a reason for leaving their job or downshifting to part-time employment, implying that the role of ill health may be inconsequential in effecting changing patterns in mid-life women's labour force activity. In contrast, interviews with 30 mid-life women (aged 40 to 54 years) illustrate that, although they do not offer illness as their main reason for leaving their job or working part-time, health is a determining factor. This research also maps the complex relationship between work and ill health, showing that stressful working conditions (due to funding cuts and policy changes) affected the mental and physical health of this group of mid-life women, which, in turn, influenced their decision to change their labour force activity. The author concludes that policy makers must recognize that ill health may be under-reported among mid-life women in large surveys and that research is needed that specifically examines women's working conditions as they relate to health. Such research should not be based solely on large surveys but must also include qualitative studies that capture women's experiences.

Résumé

Les données du Sondage sur la population active du Canada (1997) révèlent que relativement peu de femmes ayant atteint la ménopause donnent comme raison la mauvaise santé pour quitter leur emploi ou revenir à un emploi à temps partiel, ce qui suggère que le rôle de la mauvaise santé peut être négligeable dans les changements constatés dans les activités des femmes à la ménopause sur le marché du travail. Par contre, des entrevues auprès de 30 femmes à la ménopause (40 à 54 ans) illustrent que, bien qu'elles ne déclarent pas la maladie comme la principale raison les ayant incitées à quitter leur emploi ou à travailler à temps partiel, la santé est un facteur déterminant. Cette recherche trace aussi la relation complexe entre le travail et la mauvaise santé et indique que le stress lié au travail (en raison des baisses de financement et des changements de politique) a eu une incidence sur la santé mentale et physique de ce groupe de femmes à la ménopause, ce qui, à son tour, a influencé leur décision de modifier leurs activités sur le marché du travail. L'auteur conclut que les décideurs doivent reconnaître que la mauvaise santé peut être sous-déclarée par les femmes à la ménopause comme motif lors des sondages importants, et qu'il faut procéder à une recherche qui examine précisément les conditions de travail des femmes en ce qui a trait à leur santé. Une telle recherche ne devrait pas être basée uniquement sur les sondages importants, mais doit aussi comprendre des études qualitatives englobant les expériences des femmes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association on Gerontology 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The author thanks the reviewers for their helpful comments.

References

Arber, S., Gilbert, G.N., & Dale, A. (1985). Paid employment and women's health: A benefit or a source of role strain? Sociology of Health and Illness, 7(3), 375400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armstrong, P., & Armstrong, H. (1996). Wasting away: The undermining of Canadian health care. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Bischoping, K. (1993). Integrating qualitative and quantitative methods in a study of knowledge about the holocaust. American Statistical Association: 1993 proceedings of the section on survey research methods. (Vol. 2, pp. 9991003). Alexandria, VA: American Statistical Association.Google Scholar
Burke, M., Stevenson, H.M., Armstrong, P., Feldberg, G., & Rosenberg, H. (1992). Women, work, and health inequalities: An analysis of the 1990 Ontario Health Survey. (Report to the Ontario Ministry of Health). Toronto: York University Centre for Health Studies.Google Scholar
Chung, J., Cole, D., & Clarke, J. (2000). Women, work and injury. In Sullivan, T. (Ed.), Injury and the New World of Work (pp. 6990). Vancouver, BC: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Cobb, J. (1994). Understanding menopause. Toronto: Key Porter.Google Scholar
Cockburn, C. (1991). In the way of women: Men's resistance to sex equality in organizations. Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Coney, S. (1994). The menopause industry: How the medical establishment exploits women. Emeryville, CA: Hunter House.Google Scholar
Dahl, E. (1993). Social inequality in health: The role of the healthy worker effect. Social Science and Medicine, 36(8), 10771086.Google Scholar
Duffy, A., & Pupo, N. (1992). Part-time paradox: Connecting gender, work and family. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.Google Scholar
Ehrenreich, B., & English, D. (1978). For her own good: 150 years of the experts' advice to women. New York: Doubleday.Google Scholar
Flax, J. (1987). Postmodernism and gender relations in feminist theory. Signs, 12(4), 621643.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ginn, J., & Arber, S. (1996). Gender, age and attitudes to retirement in midlife. Ageing and Society, 16, 2755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffin, J., Fuhrer, M.R., Stansfeld, S.A., & Marmot, M. (2002). The importance of low control at work and home on depression and anxiety: Do these effects vary by gender and social class? Social Science and Medicine, 54(5), 783798.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gullette, M.M. (1997). Menopause as magic marker: Discursive consolidation in the United States and strategies for cultural combat. In Komesaroff, P., Rothfield, P., & Daly, J. (Eds.), Reinterpreting menopause: Cultural and philosophical issues (pp. 176199). New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Harding, S. (1987). Feminism and methodology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Harding, S. (1991). Whose Science? Whose knowledge? Thinking from women's lives. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Kome, P. (1998). Wounded workers: The politics of musculoskeletal injuries. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Kirby, S., & McKenna, K. (1989). Experience research social change: Methods from the margins. Toronto: Garamond Press.Google Scholar
McCormack, T. (1994). New faces of science: Post Harding—standpoint theory and the social sciences Unpublished manuscript.Google Scholar
McCrea, F.B. (1983). The politics of menopause: The “discovery” of a deficiency disease. Social Problems, 31(1), 111123.Google Scholar
McDonald, L. (1994). The women founders of the social sciences. Ottawa: Carleton University Press.Google Scholar
McDonald, L., & Donahue, P. (2000). Poor health and retirement income: The Canadian case. Ageing and Society, 20, 493522.Google Scholar
McDonald, L., Donahue, P., & Moore, B. (1998, April). The economic consequences of forced retirement due to poor health (IESOP Research Paper No. 29). Hamilton, ON: McMaster University.Google Scholar
McKinlay, S.M., & McKinlay, J.B. (1986). Aging in a “healthy” population. Social Science and Biosocial Science, 28(2), 108115.Google Scholar
Messing, K. (1998). One-eyed science: Occupational health and women workers. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Mitchinson, W. (1991). The nature of their bodies: Women and their doctors in Victorian Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Pierson, R.R., & Cohen, M.G. (1995). Canadian women's issues: Vol. 2. Bold visions: twenty-five years of women's activism in English Canada. Toronto: James Lorimer.Google Scholar
Rank, M.R. (2004). The blending of qualitative and quantitative methods in understanding childbearing among welfare recipients. In Hesse-Biber, S.N., & Leavy, P. (Eds.), Approaches to qualitative research: A reader on theory and practice (pp. 8196). New York: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Reid, J., & Hardy, M.A. (2000). Multiple roles and well-being among midlife women: Testing role strain and role enhancement theories. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 56B(1), S329S339.Google Scholar
Reinharz, S. (1992). Feminist methods in social research. Oxford: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Smith, D. (1987). The everyday world as problematic: A feminist sociology. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Tilt, E.J. (1857). The change of life in health and disease: A clinical treatise on the diseases of the ganglionic nervous system incidental to women at the decline of life. (2nd ed.) London: John Churchill.Google Scholar
Zukewich, N. (2003). Unpaid informal caregiving. Canadian Social Trends Autumn 70, 1418 (Statisitics Canada—Catalogue No. 11–008).Google Scholar