Who is responsible for work-life balance?
Opinion
published: 19 January 2016
doi: 10.3389/fped.2015.00121
Who is Responsible for Work–Life
Balance?
Myke Drayer Federman*
Pediatric Critical Care, UCLA Medical Center, Mattel Children’s Hospital, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Keywords: work–life balance, maternity leave, working mother, day care, gender inequality
Edited by:
Kanwaljeet J. S. Anand,
Stanford University School of
Medicine, USA
Reviewed by:
Michele Kong,
The University of Alabama at
Birmingham, USA
Narendra Reddy Dereddy,
Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital at
Westchester Medical Center, USA
*Correspondence:
Myke Drayer Federman
Specialty section:
This article was submitted to
Pediatric Critical Care,
a section of the journal
Frontiers in Pediatrics
Received: 04 November 2015
Accepted: 23 December 2015
Published: 19 January 2016
Citation:
Federman MD (2016) Who Is
Responsible for Work–Life Balance?
Front. Pediatr. 3:121.
doi: 10.3389/fped.2015.00121
Frontiers in Pediatrics | www.frontiersin.org
The problem with the concept of work–life balance is that most of the onus of achieving such clarity
and satisfaction is left to the employee. As a pediatric intensivist and mother of two, I am ruled
by the demands and requirements imposed both by my employer and academic position and by
my beautiful children. It is the culture around and perception of working mothers that needs to
change – both at work and in life. This would finally allow women to find balance and promote their
success in all aspects of their lives.
It seems every day there are new articles, blogs, and reports, you name it, which discuss work–life
balance. Everyone has their “secrets” on how you too can achieve the perfect distribution of time,
effort, and success between work and life. A quick Internet search will tell you to “Drop activities
that sap your time and energy!”, “Rethink your errands!” (1), “Leave work at work!” (2), or, my
favorite, “Rethink your idea of clean!” (3). Yes, a messy house is just the thing that will make me feel
more balanced. Of course, there are small things each of us can do to prioritize the things that are
important to us, but in order for us all, particularly working mothers, to find this elusive “balance” in
our lives, it is our work environment and culture around work and life that needs to change.
There are many aspects of the general work environment in the United States that do not support
the working mother. The sad state of maternity leave in this country is one of the clearest examples of
how poorly we support women trying to balance work and family. The United States currently ranks
20th out of the 21 high income countries in terms of the length of protected maternity leave at only
12 weeks and, along with Oman, is one of the only two countries that does not provide paid maternity
leave (4). Of course, there are exceptions in this country: Netflix recently announced it would offer
unlimited paid maternity leave to its employees, but only those on its digital side, not the lower paid,
more easy to replace line workers (5). Unfortunately, this minimalist approach to maternity leave and
pregnancy does not stop with employee policies. One of my colleagues, a neonatologist, planned an
all too brief maternity leave, but was asked 2 weeks in when she would be returning from “vacation.”
Or what about the fact that our own ruling board, The American Board of Pediatrics, would not
let me take the critical care board exam locally when I was 39 weeks pregnant? They insisted the
pregnancy was not a disability and I would have to travel hundreds of miles away to take my exam
endangering myself and my unborn daughter.
The return to work is not all that welcoming either. Exhausted, emotional and forced back to
work too early, many women long to continue breastfeeding, but we find ourselves hidden in dirty
bathrooms pumping in secrecy since pump rooms are not always made available for employees.
Returning to work also requires finding an affordable, high quality, loving environment for the new
little one who, if we were kangaroos, would not even have left the pouch yet. Finding this type of
care, whether it be daycare or nanny care, is quite challenging. The cost of high quality child care
is astronomical in this country and infant care is even more expensive and difficult to find. I am
incredibly fortunate to have phenomenal care for my children on the campus which I work, but
I could pay in-state tuition for three children here at UCLA for the same price I pay for daycare
for two.
In addition to the logistical difficulty of coming back to work, most women face questions and
opinions regarding their ability to commit to both work and family. In a study where fake resumes
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January 2016 | Volume 3 | Article 121
Federman
Who is Responsible for Work–Life Balance?
that differed only by the sex and parental status of the applicant
were evaluated, women with children were seen as less competent
than women without children, though men with children were
seen as equally competent and more warm than men without
children. These assessments led to less interest in hiring, promoting, and educating working mothers when compared to working
fathers or employees without children (6). In a similar study
using fake resumes in a “laboratory” setting as well as sending
fake resumes to actual potential employers, mothers were rated as
less competent and less committed than non-mothers, but fathers
were actually seen as being more committed and were offered
higher starting salaries than non-fathers (7). This aptly named
phenomenon, the “Motherhood penalty” is supported by countless other studies and has been documented in many countries
outside of the United States. Women face increasingly negative
perceptions about their commitment and ability as they have
more children, whereas men are seen in a more positive light as
their family grows.
Mothers need to be supported better at work. The United States
used to rank seventh in terms of the proportion of women in
the workplace, but we have recently dropped to 20th, just behind
Japan. The disappearance of women from the work force has the
potential of reducing family standards of living and negatively
affects the economy. In addition, there is mounting evidence that
having a working mother has economic, educational, and social
benefits for children of both sexes (8). A recent study by Kathleen
McGinn from Harvard Business School showed that daughters
of working mothers were more likely to be employed, had higher
incomes, and were more likely to have supervisory positions than
daughters of non-working mothers (9).
As a start, we need to have comprehensive policies to better
support maternity leave and breastfeeding at work. Large employers should consider providing on-site daycare that is affordable
and convenient. These efforts along with other initiatives to
encourage work–life balance have been shown to benefit not only
the employee, but the employer as well. Organizations with strong, (...truncated)