I. Akerlind et al., SEX-DIFFERENCES IN SICKNESS ABSENCE IN RELATION TO PARENTAL STATUS, Scandinavian journal of social medicine, 24(1), 1996, pp. 27-35
The aim of this study was to analyse sex differences in medically cert
ified sickness absence with special regard to parental status and age.
All new sick-leave spells exceeding seven days and certified by a phy
sician in a county of Sweden were registered in 1985-1987. The data-ba
se was related to the population at risk by using data from the Swedis
h Official Population and Housing Census 1985. The analysis concerned
the employed population in the age group from 16 to 54 with and withou
t custody of children younger than ten years. In all ages, women with
children had more sickness absence than men with children. Correspondi
ng sex differences did not appear for persons without children, except
for the oldest age-groups. Men with children had the lowest sickness
absence of all groups. Young women with children had the highest. Thes
e findings remained the same when pregnancy-related sickness absence w
as excluded. The common finding of sex differences in sickness absence
is here highly interrelated to custody of small children. The results
suggest that the often reported positive health effects of multiple r
oles in women may be counteracted by inequality between the sexes in t
he responsibility as parents.