Precarious Parental Employment and Use of Alcohol or Substance during COVID-19

J. Hart, Wen-Jui Han
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

As labor markets have become increasingly volatile, more workers are susceptible to conditions that threaten their economic security. COVID-19 has further laid bare such economic insecurity with far-reaching implications for coping skills and strategies. Using a cross-sectional dataset collected in May 2020 in the United States, we examined how precarious jobs were associated with alcohol or substance use among parents during the pandemic and if mental distress could explain such a link. Our multivariate regression analysis confirms that holding a job with precarious characteristics, such as feeling defenseless to authoritarian treatment at the workplace, was significantly associated with mental distress and doubled the probability of using alcohol or substance amid COVID-19. And mental distress might help explain such an association. Our analysis underscored the vulnerability faced by our workforce and how a public health crisis magnified the dire consequences of precarious employment on risky health behaviors.
COVID-19期间父母不稳定的就业和酒精或物质的使用
随着劳动力市场变得越来越不稳定,越来越多的工人容易受到威胁其经济安全的条件的影响。COVID-19进一步暴露了这种经济不安全感,对应对技能和战略产生了深远影响。我们使用2020年5月在美国收集的横截面数据集,研究了大流行期间父母中不稳定的工作与酒精或药物使用之间的关系,以及精神困扰是否可以解释这种联系。我们的多元回归分析证实,从事一份具有不稳定特征的工作,比如对工作场所的专制待遇毫无抵抗力,与精神痛苦显著相关,并使COVID-19期间使用酒精或物质的可能性增加了一倍。精神痛苦可能有助于解释这种联系。我们的分析强调了我们的劳动力面临的脆弱性,以及公共卫生危机如何放大了不稳定就业对危险健康行为的可怕后果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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