Parents' work patterns and adolescent mental health

Previous research demonstrates that non-standard work schedules undermine the stability of marriage and reduce family cohesiveness. Limited research has investigated the effects of parents working non-standard schedules on children's health and wellbeing and no published Australian studies have...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2009-02, Vol.68 (4), p.689-698
Hauptverfasser: Dockery, Alfred, Li, Jianghong, Kendall, Garth
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container_issue 4
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container_title Social science & medicine (1982)
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creator Dockery, Alfred
Li, Jianghong
Kendall, Garth
description Previous research demonstrates that non-standard work schedules undermine the stability of marriage and reduce family cohesiveness. Limited research has investigated the effects of parents working non-standard schedules on children's health and wellbeing and no published Australian studies have addressed this important issue. This paper contributes to bridging this knowledge gap by focusing on adolescents aged 15–20 years and by including sole parent families which have been omitted in previous research, using panel data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey. Multilevel linear regression models are estimated to analyse the association between parental work schedules and hours of work and measures of adolescents' mental health derived from the SF-36 Health Survey. Evidence of negative impacts of parents working non-standard hours upon adolescent wellbeing is found to exist primarily within sole parent families.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.10.005
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source MEDLINE; RePEc; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adolescent
Adolescents
Adult
Australia
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale
Child welfare
Cross-Sectional Studies
Family Work Relationship
Female
Health Surveys
Hours of work
Humans
Male
Mental Health
Mental Health Services
Non-standard work
Non-standard work Mental health Wellbeing Adolescents Australia Work schedules Parents
Parent-Child Relations
Parents
Parents & parenting
Psychology, Adolescent
Qualitative research
Single-Parent Family
Social research
Teenagers
Time
Well Being
Wellbeing
Work Schedule Tolerance
Work schedules
Working hours
Young Adult
title Parents' work patterns and adolescent mental health
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