Working women sleep less than men, shows study
August 11th, 2009 - 6:26 pm ICT by IANSWashington, Aug 11 (IANS) Women working full-time sleep less than men as they shoulder dual responsibility of office and home, a study said.
The study conducted by Professor David Maume of the University of Cincinnati (U-C), graduate student Rachel A. Sebastian and Miami University (Ohio) graduate student Anthony R. Bardo shows that load of work and family turns off the good night sleep of women.
The study authors conducted a phone survey of 583 union workers represented by a Midwestern chapter of the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW). It took place between January and April of 2007. About 62 percent of the respondents were women.
The authors also found that women were more likely to report sleep disruption than their male counterparts. Concerns of marriage, work schedules, demanding jobs affect their sleep, the authors added in a U-C release.
They said men whose wives worked full-time also reported sleep disruption when jobs and family lives spill into each other, but significantly less than women.
“Overall, the results show that gendered reactions to work-family situations accounted for more than half of the gender gap in sleep disruption,” the authors said.
“Drawing on scholarship on gender inequality on time use, we contend that sleep is an activity that is affected by gender inequality in waking role obligations,” they added.
Participants were asked about the number of hours they slept, as well as about sleep-related questions that health care workers would review in examining the health effects of sleep loss, such as, “In the past three months, did you never, rarely, sometimes or often…”
Researchers found that gender differences in health status accounted for a substantial portion (27 percent) of the gender gap in sleep disruption, with women more likely to report health effects on sleep disruption.
These findings were presented at the 104th annual meeting of the American Sociological Association (ASA) in San Francisco.
- Graveyard working shifts affect quality of marriage: Study - Aug 18, 2010
- Women feel guilty dealing with work issues at home: Study - Mar 09, 2011
- The downside of flexible work hours - Sep 30, 2010
- Equality and Human Rights Commission highlights discrimination in Britain - Oct 10, 2010
- Family, job pressures blamed for conflicts - Jun 03, 2011
- Why female bosses wreck other women's promotion hopes - Apr 11, 2011
- Lowest-paid women suffer most from motherhood penalty - Oct 06, 2010
- Gender differences in sleep interruptions revealed - Nov 17, 2010
- Flexible workplace schedule reduces work-family conflict - Apr 07, 2011
- Women workforce underpaid in India: World Bank - Oct 13, 2011
- Working mothers interrupt sleep to take care of others - Nov 17, 2010
- Boozing aggravates sleeping problems more in women than men - Feb 16, 2011
- Women wrestle with guilt when they are work intrusions at home - Mar 10, 2011
- Working in shifts 'ups risk of injury on the job' - Nov 03, 2010
- Too little sleep? You could age by seven years - May 02, 2011
Tags: american sociological association, bardo, demanding jobs, dual responsibility, family situations, gender differences, gender gap, gender inequality, good night sleep, health care workers, male counterparts, marriage work, miami university ohio, phone survey, sleep loss, study authors, united food and commercial workers, university of cincinnati, work schedules, working women