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Shift Workers, Older People, and Social Exclusion Print E-mail
Nation - Workplace
TS-Si News Service   
Monday, 19 December 2011 04:00
Elderly Crossing Sign.Swindon, United Kingdom. Work is promoted as the best route to personal well-being, with unemployment driving low income and social exclusion, but working uncommon hours also can have implications for opportunities to engage and feel integrated in society.

By encouraging people to keep a diary and analyze the way they spend their time over a 24 hour period, researchers were able to understand how they participate and the steps toward greater social inclusion.


"Feeling part of society usually involves participating in certain activities such as sports, the arts, volunteering or social networking," says Dr Matt Barnes who led the research. "Our research shows that older people and those who work unusual hours face particular barriers to participating in such activities." Dr Barnes' research shows that while shops and other facilities are beginning to adapt, such workers still find their leisure time constrained by the limited availability of services, as well as other people with whom to spend their free time.

Managing Time.

The current research results are from an ongoing project focused on the participation of people in a wide range of social and civic activities to explore various aspects of exclusion.

Investigators used the 2000 UK Time Use Survey (UKTUS) to explore the time that people spent on these activities.

The UKTUS also collects a wide range of socio-demographic and economic information on individuals and their households via standard questionnaires. This information was used to identify different subgroups of the UK population.
Two-thirds of workers work at unusual times. Compared with people who work a standard week (Monday to Friday, between 8am and 7pm), these workers spend less time on face-to-face social and relational activities, particularly if they work in the evening or at the weekend.

On average, evening workers spend six hours 43 minutes on participatory activities per week and Sunday workers just over five hours, compared with over eight hours for those who work normal hours.

Spending time with friends is an important way of building social networks and support. They can be crucial for older people dealing with life-changing events such as retirement, bereavement or illness — each of which can pose an increased risk of social isolation. The study found that older people face barriers to participatory activities — over one million older people experience poor social relations and social exclusion. Spending time with people outside the household can also provide the elderly with a sense of independence.

The study found that older people who live alone spend a lot of time with friends and acquaintances, but on average, they can also spend eleven hours alone on a week day and ten and a half hours alone at weekends (excluding sleep). Over a third of the time that older people spend with their friends is devoted to participatory activities — most often social networking such as visiting or receiving visitors, celebrating birthdays and catching up over the phone. Religious activity and doing acts of kindness involving friends are also important participatory activities.

The research also showed that women are more likely than men to spend time with friends on social networking activities. Their ability to participate, however, is limited by housework, caring for others and personal care. "It is clear that social participation is important for an improved quality of life, both in older age and among those still working," says Dr Barnes.

These results suggest that local government and charities need to recognise that social participation is important to improve people's quality of life. "Improving the accessibility of public transport and other facilities and services would go a long way towards increasing social inclusion in Britain. Local governments can encourage public leisure complexes and public transport services to operate wider hours or 24/7. Charities could be more aware of these groups when arranging social clubs targeting shift workers and elderly people", Dr Barnes concludes.

FundingThe study was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC).
ParticipationThe study was carried out by Dr Matt Barnes, Lizzie Becker, John d'Souza and Andreas Cebulla of the National Centre for Social Research.
CitationMaking time use explicit in an investigation of social exclusion in the UK. Dr Matt Barnes (Grant Holder). Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC). Start date: 14 January 2008; End date: 31 January 2010.

Project Summary

One of the major experiences of social exclusion is a deficiency of relational and social links with wider society. To date, quantitative research on the relational and social aspects of social exclusion has focused on standard survey questions that ask whether people do certain activities thought to relate to inclusion in society (some surveys also ask about the frequency of taking part in these activities). These activities represent social relationships, and other customary civic and cultural behaviour. Failure to take part, systematically, in these activities is deemed to indicate social exclusion.

Missing from previous studies of social exclusion is information on the key elements embraced in the notion of relational and social links with society - predominantly the time that people spend on related activities and who they spend this time with. This study will make time use explicit in the definition of social exclusion. The study will also investigate who is most likely to be socially excluded, using a combination of factors that measure the socio-demographic, economic and time resources of individuals, their families and their local area.

The study will build on the author’s ESRC supported PhD thesis which conceptualised and measured social exclusion using standard survey data.

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TS-Si is dedicated to the acceptance, medical treatment, and legal protection of individuals correcting the misalignment of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.


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Last Updated on Sunday, 18 December 2011 21:21