Does flexible work 'work' in Australia? A survey of employed mothers' and fathers' work, family and health
Loading...
Date
Authors
Hokke, Stacey
Bennetts, S.K.
Crawford, Sharinne
Leach, Liana
Hackworth, Naomi
Strazdins, Lyndall
Nguyen, Cattram D
Nicholson, Jan M
Cooklin, Amanda
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Workplace flexibility is perceived to benefit parents yet evidence of
the effectiveness of formal work arrangements in promoting
parents’ health is mixed, and few have evaluated informal
flexibility. This study investigates Australian mothers’ and fathers’
use of formal (employer-provided) and informal (self-directed)
work arrangements and associations with work-family conflict and
health outcomes (psychological distress, occupational fatigue,
burnout). Online survey data from a national cross-sectional
sample of 4268 employed parents (one or more children ≤18
years) were collected in 2016. Standardised measures of health
outcomes were reported. Analyses were stratified by gender given
the gendered division of work and care in Australia. Multivariate
linear regression analyses showed greater use of flexible work
arrangements (e.g. flexitime, flexiplace) was associated with lower
fatigue and less burnout for fathers and mothers. Conversely,
higher use of flexible leave arrangements (e.g. purchased leave)
and informal arrangements (e.g. performing family-related tasks at
work) were each associated with poorer health outcomes.
Findings contribute novel evidence on the status of workplace
flexibility for Australian fathers and mothers. Flexible work
arrangements may have some health benefits, yet the widespread
use of informal arrangements suggests flexible workplace
provisions alone are not meeting parents’ needs for family-related
support.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Community, Work and Family
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description