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KMID : 0613620240440010449
Health Social Welfare Review
2024 Volume.44 No. 1 p.449 ~ p.471
Differences in Mental Health according to Employment, Unemployment, and Job Insecurity of Married Women: Focusing on Age Heterogeneity
Choi Ji-Hee

Lee Jun-Hyup
Abstract
This study analyzed the mental health effects of employment status and job insecurity on married women. As of the 10th Korea Welfare Panel Study (2014), a binary logistic regression analysis was conducted on women 19 years of age or older who were continuously married and participated in the survey until the 17th panel (2021). In addition, the study categorized subjects into youth, middle-aged, and elderly groups to analyze mental health by age group. Unemployment and unstable employment of elderly married women (56 to 65 years old) negatively affected mental health, but the employment status of younger and middle- aged married women (25 to 55 years old) did not significantly affect mental health. Even if both groups were employed at the present time, the group with experience of unemployment had a higher risk of depression than the group without. Also, in the case of unemployment, the group with job search experience reported a lower mental health status than the group without. This suggests the need to consider negative experiences related to employment when understanding the mental health problems of elderly married women, and the results of this study can be used as a basis for policy development for the healthy life and aging of married women.
KEYWORD
Married Women, Employment Status, Job Insecurity, Age Heterogeneity, Mental Health
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