Part-time work is more than twice as common among women than men in Sweden. New ways of
organizing working hours to allow for more full-time jobs have been introduced for care workers in
elderly care, which means unscheduled working hours based on the needs of the workplace. The
aim of the study is to analyze how the organization of the unscheduled working hours affect employees?
daily lives and their possibility to provide care. The Classic Grounded Theory method was
used in a secondary analysis of interviews with employees and managers in Swedish municipal
elderly care.
The implementation of unscheduled working hours plunged employees into a situation of
managing organized insecurity. This main concern for the care workers involved a cyclic process of
first having to be available for work because of economic and social obligations to the employer
and the co-workers, despite sacrifices in the private sphere. Then, they had to be adaptable in
relation to unknown clients and co-workers and to the employer, which means reduced possibilities
to provide good care. Full-time jobs were thus created through requiring permanent staff to be
flexible, which in effect meant eroded working conditions with high demands on employee adaptability.
Solving the part-time problem in elderly care by introducing unscheduled working hours may
in effect be counter-productive.
Author Biographies
Lene Ede, Department of Social and Psychological Studies, Karlstad University
PhD student
Ulla Rantakeisu, Department of Social and Psychological Studies, Karlstad
University