Uncovering the Work-Family Interface: The Impact of Facilitators and Stressors on the Health of Farm Women
Abstract
Work-family interface (WFI) theory has identified many stressors that influence work-family dynamics from the standpoint of employees. However, work-family facilitators, as well as the effects of gender differences and the impact of sociocultural environments that differ from a formal employment situation, have received much less attention. Our research aimed to fill these theoretical gaps by analyzing the facilitators and stressors involved in work-family dynamics and determining their consequences for farm women's physical, psychological, and social health. We used a qualitative method with a grounded theory design to collect data via semi-structured interviews with 46 farm women from the region of Araucania in Chile. Our results explain how facilitators, stressors, and outcomes take place in a process of work-family balance that, paradoxically, implies exhausting journeys, a gender-based overload, a risk of diffuse body pain and distress, and a lack of time for personal healthcare and productive autonomy. Addressing these issues requires a comprehensive approach involving improved healthcare infrastructure and services focused on changing the pressures that the farming WFI exerts on rural women.
Más información
Título según WOS: | Uncovering the Work-Family Interface: The Impact of Facilitators and Stressors on the Health of Farm Women |
Título de la Revista: | HEALTHCARE |
Volumen: | 11 |
Número: | 20 |
Editorial: | MDPI |
Fecha de publicación: | 2023 |
DOI: |
10.3390/healthcare11202726 |
Notas: | ISI |