The impact of changes in job security on mental health across gender and family responsibility: evidence from the UK Household Longitudinal Study

Publication type

Journal Article

Authors

Publication date

November 12, 2021

Summary:

Purpose:

While there is strong evidence that job insecurity leads to mental distress, little is known about how gender and parental responsibilities may exacerbate this relationship. Examining their contribution as potential effect modifiers may provide insights into gender inequalities in mental health and inform gender-sensitive labour policies to ameliorate the negative effects of job insecurity. Our study addresses this gap by examining the longitudinal association between job insecurity and mental health across different configurations of gender and parental responsibilities.
Methods:

Our sample includes 34,772 employed participants over the period of 2010–2018. A gender-stratified fixed-effect regression was used to model the within-person change over time in mental health associated with loss of job security, and effect modification by parent–partner status (e.g. childfree men, partnered father, etc.).
Results:

Loss of job security was associated with a moderate decrease in mental health functioning for partnered fathers, partnered mothers, and childfree men and women ranging between a reduction in MCS-12 by 1.00 to 2.27 points (p < 0.05). Lone fathers who lose their job security experienced a higher decrease in mental health functioning at − 7.69 (95% CI − 12.69 to − 2.70), while lone mothers did not experience any change.
Conclusion:

The effects of job insecurity on mental health is consistent across gender and parent–partner status with the exception of lone fathers and lone mothers. Future studies should investigate the effects of policies that may reduce mental distress in the face of the threat of job loss such as reducing wait time for payment of unemployment benefits.

Published in

Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-021-02187-6

ISSN

9337954

Subjects

Notes

Online Early

#547045

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