Sick Leave?A Signal of Unequal Work Organizations?
Gender perspectives on work environment and work organizations
in the health care sector: a knowledge review
Authors
Annika V?nje
School for Technology and Health, Royal Institute of Technology
(KTH)
The background to this article review is governmental interest in finding reasons why a majority
of the employees in Sweden who are on sick leave are women. In order to find answers to these
questions three issues will be discussed from a meso-level: (i) recent changes in the Swedish
health care sector?s working organization and their effects on gender, (ii) what research says
about work health and gender in the health care sector, and (iii) the meaning of gender at work.
The aim is to first discuss these three issues to give a picture of what gender research says concerning
work organization and work health, and second to examine the theories behind the issue.
In this article the female-dominated health care sector is in focus. This sector strives for efficiency
relating to invisible job tasks and emotional work performed by women. In contemporary work
organizations gender segregation has a tendency to take on new and subtler forms. One reason
for this is today?s de-hierarchized and flexible organizations. A burning question connected to this
is whether new constructions of masculinities and femininities really are ways of relating to the
prevailing norm in a profession or are ways of deconstructing the gender order. To gain a deeper
understanding of working life we need multidisciplinary research projects where gender-critical
knowledge is interwoven into research not only on organizations, but also into research concerning
the physical work environment, in order to be able to develop good and sustainable work
environments, in this case in the health care sector
Author Biography
Annika V?nje, School for Technology and Health, Royal Institute of Technology
(KTH)