PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Work-family conflict among hotel housekeepers in the Balearic Islands (Spain).

  • Xenia Chela-Alvarez,
  • M Esther Garcia-Buades,
  • Victoria A Ferrer-Perez,
  • Oana Bulilete,
  • Joan Llobera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269074
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e0269074

Abstract

Read online

The massive incorporation of women to the labour market has increased academic and applied interest on work-life issues throughout the years. This article aims to describe the domestic burden and difficulties in work-life balance (WLB) and to understand the intersection of work and family spheres among hotel housekeepers (HHs). A cross-sectional study was conducted through Primary Health Care in the Balearic Islands (Spain); 1,043 HHs were enrolled. 56.7% reported difficulties in WLB. Risk factors for perceiving difficulties in WLB were: living with someone else (regardless of the number of co-habitants), having difficulties making ends meet, being the main person in charge of domestic tasks, having a dependant, having an external locus of control, presenting higher levels of stress at work, working more hours a week and being younger. Protective factors from experiencing work-family conflict (WFC) were job and wage satisfaction. WFC is strongly influenced by individual, economic, labour and domestic factors: these relationships show that labour and domestic spheres are non-separate worlds.