Authors
Tania L King, Marissa Shields, Sean Byars, Anne M Kavanagh, Lyn Craig, Allison Milner
Publication date
2020/12
Journal
American Journal of Epidemiology
Volume
189
Issue
12
Pages
1512-1520
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
In Australia, as in many industrialized countries, the past 50 years have been marked by increasing female labor-force participation. It is popularly speculated that this might impose a mental-health burden on women and their children. This analysis aimed to examine the associations between household labor-force participation (household employment configuration) and the mental health of parents and children. Seven waves of data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children were used, comprising 2004–2016, with children aged 4–17 years). Mental health outcome measures were the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (children/adolescents) and 6-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (parents). A 5-category measure of household employment configuration was derived from parental reports: both parents full-time, male-breadwinner, female-breadwinner, shared-part-time employment (both …
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