Stockholm university

Research project The unintended consequences of Swedish parental leave policy: A health equity perspective

The purpose of this project is to assess the unintended health consequences of Sweden’s parental leave policy, while addressing the interplay between parental leave use and health, both before and after childbearing.

This project will contribute much needed knowledge to ongoing debates on parental leave policy reform by illustrating the ways in which parental leave policy can also act as health policy and by providing knowledge that can be used to help achieve Sweden’s public health policy goals of social and health equity for all. This project will be conducted by an interdisciplinary team of researchers, including social epidemiologists, demographers and sociologists.

ParLeHealth
Photo: Shalamov/Mostphotos

Project description

Sweden has one of the most generous and gender-equitable paid parental leave policies in the world, with couples being entitled to up to 480 days of paid leave per child until the age of 12. The parental leave benefits system has helped the country to address crucial societal challenges by facilitating increased participation of women in the labour market, thus promoting a dual earner family arrangement that contributes to more equitable participation in the labour market and in family life. Still, some aspects of the Swedish parental leave policy could also be responsible for the maintenance or even increase in social and health inequalities in society.

Purpose of the project

The purpose of this project is to assess the unintended health consequences of Sweden’s parental leave policy, while addressing the interplay between parental leave use and health, both before and after childbearing. Specifically, we aim to evaluate potentially adverse health consequences derived from three aspects of the policy: 1) the speed premium supplement, introduced to parents who have children in quick succession (i.e., 30 months' spacing between births) to compensate for a reduction in benefits as a result of already receiving a benefits allowance for their first child; 2) the introduction and expansion of parental leave days exclusively reserved for the father (the so-called Daddy quota); and 3) the strong work requirement for paid parental leave eligibility (of at least 8 months in employment before childbirth) that excludes or is less beneficial for groups with insecurity in the labour market, such as students, migrants or those who have suffered from illness. A particular focus will be placed on the examination of mental health and reproductive health, including maternal and child health outcomes, which may be most affected by parental leave policies.

This project will be conducted over four years by an interdisciplinary team of researchers, including social epidemiologists, demographers and sociologists. We will use a variety of advanced statistical modelling techniques. This project will contribute much needed knowledge to ongoing debates on parental leave policy reform by illustrating the ways in which parental leave policy can also act as health policy and by providing knowledge that can be used to help achieve Sweden’s public health policy goals of social and health equity for all.

Project members

Project managers

Sol Juarez

Senior Lecturer, Associate Professor

Department of Public Health Sciences
SOL JUAREZ

Members

Andrea Dunlavy

Lecturer/Researcher

Department of Public Health Sciences
Andrea Dunlavy

Anders Hjern

Guest Researcher

Department of Public Health Sciences
Anders Hjern

Ann-Zofie Duvander

Professor of Demography

Department of Sociology
Ann-Zofie Duvander. Foto: Leila Zoubir/Stockholms universitet

Amy Heshmati

PhD Student

Department of Public Health Sciences
Amy Heshmati

Eleonora Mussino

Researcher, Docent

Department of Sociology
Eleonora Mussino. Photo: Leila Zoubir/Stockholm University

Enrico Debiasi

Guest Researcher

Department of Public Health Sciences

Helena Honkaniemi-Hoppe

Resercher

Department of Public Health Sciences
Helena Honkaniemi

Mikael Rostila

Professor

Department of Public Health Sciences
MR

Srinivasa Vittal Katikireddi

Professor, MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow

University of Glasgow

Publications

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