了解在 COVID-19 大流行期间教师在护理、压力和对机构支持的看法方面的性别差异

Sarah Thébaud, Charlotte Hoppen, Jennifer David, Eileen Boris
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摘要

在 COVID-19 危机期间,护理基础设施的丧失暴露了社会对妇女和母亲作为默认护理者的持续依赖。但是,人们对这场危机如何产生性别心理健康结果却知之甚少,尤其是在以密集型工作文化为特征的职业领域,如学术界。2021 年 5 月,我们对美国一所大型研究型大学的教职员工进行了一次全校范围的调查,根据调查的定量和定性结果,我们探讨了教职员工照顾者在时间利用、压力和对机构支持的感知方面的性别模式。我们的研究结果表明,女性承担的育儿责任不仅在时间上比男性更多,而且在质量上也有所不同,女性的育儿时间更难以预测、更容易被打断,在精神和情感上的要求也更高。我们还发现,与男性相比,大流行病对女性教职员工的心理健康造成了更大的伤害。出现这种心理健康方面的差距,不仅仅是因为女性平均花费了更多的时间来照顾他人,还因为大学的政策没有有效地支持最紧张的照顾者。这项研究为有关大流行病期间学术照顾者的研究提供了经验证据,并证明了(1)性别照顾动态是如何影响心理健康和远程工作体验的,以及(2)依赖个人解决方案来平衡工作和家庭,即使是相对优越的工作者也会失败。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding Gender Disparities in Caregiving, Stress, and Perceptions of Institutional Support among Faculty during the COVID-19 Pandemic
The loss of the care infrastructure that occurred during the COVID-19 crisis exposed society’s continued reliance on women and mothers as default caregivers. But less is known about how this crisis produced gendered mental health outcomes, especially in occupations characterized by intensive work cultures such as academia. Drawing on quantitative and qualitative responses from a May 2021 campus-wide survey of faculty at a large research university in the United States, we explore gendered patterns in faculty caregivers’ time use, stress, and perceptions of institutional support. Our findings demonstrate that childcare responsibilities were not merely more substantial for women than men in terms of hours, but they were also qualitatively different, with women’s hours being more unpredictable, interruptive, and mentally and emotionally demanding. We also show that the pandemic took a higher toll on women faculty’s mental health compared to men’s. This gap in mental health emerged not merely because women were spending more time caregiving on average, but also because the university’s policies did not effectively support the most strained caregivers. This study contributes empirical evidence to research on academic caregivers during the pandemic and to work demonstrating how (1) gendered caregiving dynamics shape mental health and remote work experiences and (2) the reliance on individual solutions to balancing work and family has failed even relatively privileged workers.
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