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Work-family interference : nurses in Norway and Finland

Author(s): Abrahamsen, Bente, Kari Anne Holte and Marjukka Laine

This study challenges the notion of the desirable consequences of work hour flexibility concerning the integration of work and family. Part-time nurses report an equal level or even higher levels of interference than nurses in full-time positions.

Abstract

The aim of the study is to investigate the level of work-family interference (WFI) for part-time nurses in Norway and Finland. Part-time work is usually cited as a desirable way in which to facilitate work and family harmony. However, the opportunity to work part-time in professions may be associated with greater difficulties and challenges than commonly presumed. Part-time professionals are often stigmatized as being less committed to work and report fewer job rewards than colleagues in full-time positions. This study challenges the notion of the desirable consequences of work hour flexibility concerning the integration of work and family. Part-time nurses in Norway and Finland report an equal level or even higher levels of interference than nurses in full-time positions. A disproportional distribution of inconvenient work schedules appears to be a central explanation for the results reported by Norwegian nurses, but to a lesser degree by Finnish nurses.

Published in: Professions and Professionalism. - Vol. 2, no. 3

Year: 2012

Publisher: Oslo and Akershus University College

http://journals.hioa.no/index.php/pp/article/view/19

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