AI Article Synopsis

  • The study used the Work-Home Resources model to analyze how employed mothers manage their time between work and family, identifying three distinct profiles: Work-Oriented, Parenting-Oriented, and Role-Balanced.
  • Mothers with a Work-Oriented profile faced more work-to-family and family-to-work conflicts than those in the other two profiles.
  • The findings suggest that reducing work-to-family conflict could help mothers better allocate their time for parenting and that workplace interventions should focus on enhancing family time and minimizing conflicts.

Article Abstract

Drawing upon the Work-Home Resources model (ten Brummelhuis & Bakker, 2012), this study examined the links between work-family conflict and employed mothers' profiles of time resources for work and parenting roles. Using a person-centered latent profile approach, we identified 3 profiles of time use and perceived time adequacy in a sample of mothers employed in the extended-care industry (N = 440): a Work-Oriented profile, characterized by spending relatively more time at work, perceiving lower time adequacy for work, spending less time with children, and perceiving lower time adequacy for children; a Parenting-Oriented profile, characterized by the opposite pattern; and a Role-Balanced profile, characterized by average levels across the 4 dimensions. Mothers in the Work-Oriented profile reported greater work-to-family conflict and family to-work conflict than those in the Role-Balanced and Parenting-Oriented profiles. Greater work-to-family conflict was linked to membership in the Work-Oriented profile, net of personal, family, and work characteristics. Longitudinal latent profile transition analysis showed that increases in work-to-family conflict across 12 months were linked to greater odds of moving toward the Work-Oriented profile (relative to staying in the same profile), whereas decreases in work-to-family conflict were linked to greater odds of moving toward the Parenting-Oriented profile. Results illuminate the heterogeneity in how employed mothers perceive and allocate time in work and parenting roles and suggest that decreasing work-to-family conflict may preserve time resources for parenting. Intervention efforts should address ways of increasing employees' family time resources and decreasing work-family conflict. (PsycINFO Database Record

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5550374PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/fam0000303DOI Listing

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