AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to understand the impact of feeling overwhelmed by responsibilities (role overload) on women's mental health compared to other social factors.
  • A telephone survey conducted with 716 Canadian women found that higher role overload correlated with poorer mental health, while part-time or full-time work and higher household income were linked to better mental health outcomes.
  • The research highlights the importance of examining how women balance multiple roles in their lives, suggesting that role overload is a key factor influencing mental health more than sociodemographic aspects like income.

Article Abstract

Objective: To determine the importance of role overload (the extent to which a person feels overwhelmed by her total responsibilities) relative to other known social determinants of women's mental health.

Methods: A Canadian national, random sample, cross-sectional telephone survey in 2003 assessed the association among role overload, types and quality of roles (parent, employee, spouse), sociodemographics, and mental health (using the SF-12) using linear regression. Analysis included 716 women aged 25-54 who indicated that their youngest child living in the household was aged < or =17 years.

Results: Perceptions of greater role overload were associated with poorer mental health (p < 0.0001). Women working <35 hours per week (p = 0.04) or 35-40 hours per week (p 5 0.002) reported better mental health than nonemployed women, as did women with the highest annual household income ($70,000+)(p = 0.001). Also associated with better mental health were higher marital status quality scores for both married and single women (p < 0.001), higher job quality scores among employed women (p = 0.02), greater homemaking quality scores among unemployed women (p = 0.03), and women reporting high parental quality (p = 0.04)

Conclusions: Role overload showed a stronger relationship to mental health than other sociodemographic variables, including income. Our findings indicate the importance of measuring women's experience of their multiple roles rather than focusing on single roles. More research is warranted on the totality of women's experiences of their many social role obligations.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jwh.2007.0783DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

role overload
16
mental health
12
association role
8
women's mental
8
overload
4
overload women's
4
mental
4
health objective
4
objective determine
4
determine role
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!