5 health barriers working women face—and how to break them

It’s been 100 years since U.S. women won voting rights. Communicators, ensure that women won’t wait as long to rid the workplace of unfair health barriers.

women-in-business-health-barriers

Enshrined in the Constitution 100 years ago, women’s right to vote shattered barriers for future generations. The power of choice, however, still eludes women trying to stay well while working.

Shouldering remote work duties while being caregivers, surrogate teachers, and household managers, women in today’s workplace balance a mountain of stress. Health-related gender biases are so common, they have shockingly become accepted customs.

Businesses must do their part to remedy the wellness crisis for working women. As a start, communicators can point out where gender assumptions threaten the health, safety and sense of belonging for employees.

The gender gauntlet

Single or partnered? Mother or childfree? Age 40 or older? Younger? Racial identity? Gender expression?

Welcome to women’s daily dash through the gender gauntlet.

Throughout their careers, women confront overlapping dimensions of bias or “intersectionality,” a term first specified by legal and civil rights scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw. Although experiences of unfair treatment are very personal, the marginalization of working women as a group persists because it is embedded in business culture.

Gender bias in the workplace is often hidden or dismissed as harmless fun. Over time, distorted judgments are stockpiled, and then weaponized by managers whose policies undermine the careers of women.

Risk to careers and health

Systemic inequalities not only thwart career advancement, they also harm women’s health. This keeps a woman’s place in business in a perpetual state of instability.

Vigilant communicators can help organizations close gaps for women in five health categories, set forth in 1948 by the World Health Organization: Physical, Intellectual, Spiritual, Emotional and Social.

  1. Physical health

For older women, maternal health is turning into a test, not only of their physical readiness to work, but also for retaining their roles as authority figures.

Birth rates have held steady or risen for women aged 35 and older from 2018 to 2019, while numbers have fallen for women aged 15 to 34, according to the CDC’s May 2020 findings.

After reaching the management phase of their careers, female employees find they lack the resources needed during pregnancy and after giving birth. Without options such as paid family leave, remote work, flexible hours or support for pumping breast milk at work, many new mothers who are decision-makers end up leaving their jobs.

  1. Intellectual health

Creative problem-solving is not only a business exercise, it is also a function of staying healthy.

Innovative thinking by women, however, is rarely rewarded. Female founders of startups received a meager 2.8% of available capital invested in 2019, according to Pitchbook.

Working women still face unfair stereotypes when introducing their logic. When they challenge a point, they are labeled as “difficult.” Their judgment is questioned or characterized as women’s intuition.

  1. Spiritual health

Female employees who strive for a higher purpose at work seek ways to unite or encourage their colleagues.

Managers view activities like planning company parties or serving on diversity and inclusion committees to be culturally enriching. However, such roles are not valued enough to garner extra compensation or promotions, explained economics professors Linda Babcock, Maria P. Recalde, and Lisa Vesterlund.

Considered “office housework,” executives view women’s nurturing relationships as mere scaffolding for outcomes lauded as heroic, such as generating revenue and reducing costs.

“These differences do not appear to result from gender differences in preferences, but rather from a shared understanding that women will volunteer more than men…managers could consider rotating assignments across employees,” wrote Babcock, Recalde, and Vesterlund in Harvard Business Review.

  1. Emotional health

As their parents and loved ones age at home, women who are family members or friends provide unpaid care. The sacrifice affects their well-being and wallets.

Devoting about three hours a day to eldercare, often while holding down outside jobs, women feel burnt out from lack of sleep, self-doubt and financial worries. In addition, the uncompensated work of female caregivers racks up $324,000 in lost primary wages and Social Security benefits, as well as $7,000 in personal expenses, says AARP.

By providing access to wellness resources, employee affinity groups, and flexible work schedules, employers can support working women who voluntarily care for America’s aging population.

  1. Social health

During this time of social distancing, video calls function as an important lifeline for women.

There may be female employees who habitually turn down invitations to video meetings. They may have agitated domestic partners who frequently interrupt them onscreen. Do not dismiss these as evidence of a woman’s poor work habits or lack of professionalism.

In April 2020, the United Nations Population Fund laid out troubling projections: “For every 3 months the lockdown continues, an additional 15 million additional cases of gender-based violence are expected.” UN Women provided guidance on keeping women safe while working remotely in its Women’s Empowerment Principles.

Staying fit and free from disease is how most people pursue a healthy lifestyle. For too many women, staying safe and well can shut doors to reaching their full potential at work.

Communicators, work with your employers now to ensure that women will not have to wait 100 more years to break another barrier.

Mary C. Buhay is founder and CEO of Buhay Advisors. You can follow her on LinkedIn marybuhay and Twitter @MaryBuhay.

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