Abstract :
Data on over 20,000 women and men aged 20–59 are analysed from the British General Household Survey for 1991 and 1992, showing the importance of separately analysing educational qualifications, occupational class and employment status for both women and men. Own occupational class and employment status are the key structural factors associated with limiting long-standing illness, but educational qualifications are particularly good predictors of womenʹs self-assessed health. Class inequalities in health are less pronounced among women who are not in paid work. Womenʹs limiting long-standing illness relates solely to their own labour market characteristics, whereas self-assessed health relates to wider aspects of womenʹs everyday lives, including their household material conditions, and for married women, their partnerʹs occupational class and employment status. Menʹs unemployment has adverse consequences for the health of their wives, which occurs through the mechanism of the family living in disadvantaged material circumstances. Womenʹs labour market position and role in the family have undergone substantial changes since the 1970s. Approaches to measuring inequalities in womenʹs health need to reflect changes in womenʹs employment participation and changes in marital status and living arrangements.
Keywords :
Finland , Health inequalities , Gender , Structural change