MedicalXpress: Impact of additional responsibilities women assumed by ‘default’ during the pandemic

by La Trobe University

Retrieved from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-02-impact-additional-responsibilities-women-assumed.html


by La Trobe University

work from home mother
Credit: Ketut Subiyanto from Pexels

New studies by La Trobe University have shed light on the impact of additional responsibilities women assumed by “default” during the COVID-19 pandemic, influencing a spike in drinking among working mothers. The studies were published in Addiction Research & Theory and Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy.

Participants noted the lack of control they felt over their everyday lives and drinking as they juggled working from home, parenting, household, and teaching roles combined with the limit on socialized activities outside the home.

The two studies were comprised of the same sample and interviewed 22 Australian women over five months in 2022, who mostly identified as professional workers between the ages of 36 and 51. They described feeling overburdened during COVID-19 restrictions because of their increased workload and lack of organizational support, contributing to heightened alcohol consumption.

“We were all stuffed, it was horrible. We were all working and trying to home school and it was just so awful … and so, I guess, my girlfriends were going through that too, the ones with kids, and they were all definitely drinking a lot more,” said one study participant.

“It was probably the homeschooling that really made me crack,” said another study participant.

“I don’t think there was, across the board, a great understanding of the stress involved in taking on supervision of children’s education in private work settings,” said another study participant.

Lead researcher and Ph.D. candidate Maree Patsouras, at the Center for Alcohol Policy Research, said drinking alcohol for many women became a coping mechanism to surviving the day. However, the attitudes towards drinking shifted from pleasure to negative connotations as the study progressed.

“In the short term, women justified their alcohol consumption by wanting to relax and have some enjoyment,” Maree said.

“They explained there was little to look forward to during the lockdowns, with the absence of their usual activities, and the perception of alcohol as a reward was amplified.

“But the meanings associated with alcohol later conflicted with the earlier discussions to wanting to forget their days and ease the stress.”

Most working mothers described increased alcohol consumption often in terms of frequency, particularly on weekdays, during the lockdowns. Some women recounted they increased the quantity by pouring extra or larger glasses.

“Before COVID, maybe one or two nights a week and it would be a couple of glasses of wine. It wasn’t anything in excess, but then during COVID it became a bottle of wine sometimes,” said a study participant.

Others reported their drinking style as distinctly different to men, where drinking occurred in the blurred transition between working and parenting roles. Maree said this highlights the research and its relevance beyond pandemic restrictions.

The studies also pointed to a broader cultural normalization of alcohol use, particularly among women during the pandemic, amid a time when bottle shops were deemed as an essential service.

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