Individual and Organizational Strategies for Promoting Work–Life Balance for Sustainable Workforce: A Systematic Literature Review from Pakistan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What are the challenges in maintaining work–life balance during COVID-19?
- How have individuals and organizations utilized different strategies for addressing the work–life balance?
- How can a sustainable workforce be promoted/prepared after a crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic?
2. Methods
2.1. Literature Search and Screening
2.2. Quality Appraisal
2.3. Data Extraction and Synthesis
3. Findings
3.1. Home as over Loaded Workstation
‘I would say it was a terrible experience throughout. My 73-year-old mother-in-law became more demanding during the lockdown. Earlier my brother-in-law and sisters-in-law used to visit her often. My husband works in the UAE. Now there were no visitors … she expected me and my children to spend more time with her. My husband was not here. I had to do household chores, plan and take online sessions…My mother-in-law got extremely annoyed with me.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 396)
and‘I feel all my energy has drained. The school administration wants quality in online teaching but I am unable to ensure that quality while working from home.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 390)
‘…I was unable to give my kids time due to unscheduled working hours and meetings along with unrealistic deadlines.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 397)
‘My home environment is not suitable for professional activities. There is limited space in my home. My two children and I have online classes simultaneously.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 390)
‘The free days for post-duty quarantine were even more difficult. Firstly, you have to stay with your kids as nobody was ready to take care of them, secondly, for the safety of the family we let all the maids or helping hands go, so I had to do all the household chores which were previously done by maids.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 4)
‘A three-hour class a week would often take five hours or more for a single course and having a workload of 4 courses; I was on the run all week.’(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 149)
‘I have to be awake late at night to complete my work-related tasks. My principal will not compromise on the quality of teaching. But my children cannot understand this. I wish a day could have been of 40 h.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 396)
‘Despite government policies of not putting pregnant ladies and staff with comorbidities on COVID-19 duties, hospital administration forced them to do duties and threatened them with termination if they refused.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 6)
3.2. Gendered Nature of Impact
‘I have to take care of my 2-year-old son at the same time (along with teaching). My daughter and I take turns to attend to him. I believe that my teaching performance and my children’s learning has been greatly affected by COVID-19.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 390)
‘In one room my elder son takes his A’ level classes. I and my daughter sit in the same room for our classes. She gets disturbed because I have to speak.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 397)
‘My husband…over-burdened me in other ways. For example, when the maid washed dishes, he asked me to wash them again. I sometimes forgot and this led to conflict between us.’(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 148)
3.3. Abrupt Shift for Organizations to New-Normal
‘Most of the faculty members are technophobes. It becomes a huge challenge to get through a day’s work. The faculty is not trained for online teaching.’(Sethi et al. [76]. p. 9)
When we (the organization) first shifted to online teaching, I think the major challenge was the absence of the whiteboard. We are not used to writing and drawing things with a mouse.(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 149)
‘Delivering a lecture to unresponsive students who had muted cameras and microphones was frustrating…Delivering 1.5 hours of the lecture was like walking on trail 3 [one of the many lively and challenging uphill trails in Margalla hills of Islamabad, Pakistan]. It was exhausting and stressful.’(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 149)
(Among students) ‘inculcating social skills, networking, and relevant employability skills appear to be difficult now…students do not give presentations in online teaching, they do not liaise with different people from the industry, and these important soft skills cannot be taught online.’(Abid et al. [101]. p. 379)
‘Cybersecurity…the glitches with the use of various apps are annoying…sudden popping up of inappropriate content and ads is problematic.’(Abid et al. [101]. p. 376)
‘Online education was just imposed on us suddenly…There was no support from my school. I had to spend a lot on internet connections to ensure proper internet connectivity. Buying and updating the devices was also too expensive for me. But I did not have any other option.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 397)
‘No support from the school. This is such a shame. In my school, a group of teachers requested the school management to provide some financial assistance for purchasing laptops. But the management suggested them to leave if they could not afford to buy resources. It was so ruthless. They know that we need jobs and they are pressurizing us. This is so inhuman. We, teachers, are struggling in arranging resources for ourselves and our kids.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 397)
The ‘double burden of balancing full-time jobs with fulltime caregiving and household responsibilities” pushed women out of the formal labor force.’(IFC and PBC [102]. p. 10)
3.4. Psychological Pressures
‘Previously only school heads used to observe teachers. Now parents also observe us. This is quite stressful. We need to be more prepared and skillful.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 398)
‘Well-being at a personal level is rest and peace of mind. Sleepless nights and burdens have increased due to the increase in administrative and academic tasks along with the need to care for young kids. As a result, my self-care has deteriorated; I have put on weight and my skin is impaired. So, I have served everyone but neglected myself.’(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 151)
‘It was more like working in a morgue. You can feel death everywhere. Somehow you manage to work during duty hours, but when you’re alone it’s hard to collect your broken pieces. You have no shoulder to cry on and no one to boost you.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 4)
‘I feel I am in the incubator. No one really wants to be around me knowing that I am treating COVID-19 patients.’(Raza et al. [103]. p. 8)
‘Literally, no one ever thinks of what we are facing in our daily lives. There is no actual channel or helpline for psychologically drained health workers.’(Raza et al. [103]. p. 7)
‘When I get back from my shift, I am exhausted and cannot figure out how many days or nights have passed on.’(Raza et al. [103]. p. 6)
‘Psychological battle with uncertainty. I’m in state of fear and stress and sometimes depression too…I cannot sleep at night.’(Sethi et al. [76]. p. 8.)
‘My colleague became COVID-19 positive while caring for patients. Her family opted for a private facility when she needed intensive care, but the government offered no health allowance. Pay cut imposed by our institution is disheartening, even though we are working from home and working 24/7.’(Sethi et al. [76]. p. 8)
‘I hid the whole night in a nearby ward as the attendants of patients were beating all the staff when we broke the news of their patient’s death.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 6)
3.5. Balancing Channels
‘Now becoming more independent learners (during online classes) …’(Abid et al. [101]. p. 378)
‘It gave them a fair idea what kind of challenges anthropologists are facing to conduct personal interviews and what alternate methods can be employed during a pandemic to overcome this limitation.’(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 149)
‘On WhatsApp group, all the colleagues were supporting…helping with work-related things is essential.’(Abid et al. [101]. p. 376)
‘In sheer desperation, I thought of committing suicide. I would say that my school administration helped me in this terrible phase of depression. They reduced my workload and provided me with counseling. That was very helpful.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 396)
‘The ground reality is the burdens have been decreased as I no longer have to prepare clothes, shoes, matching accessories every day for my class. This also needed time and energy.’(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 149)
‘Only unmarried participants received full support from their families and maintained the recommended quarantine during and after their duty period.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 4)
‘I think we have a reasonably good system built for disaster and we have a very defined chair of command (leadership)…There have been different working groups formed for COVID-19 and they all have specialized tasks for information sharing, and there is a COVID-19 hotline for employees and the public and that is adequate.’(Feroz et al. [104]. p. 5)
3.6. Coping through Personal Resources
“… (Instead of) a major cognitive shift by introducing an entirely different way of teaching…a familiar teaching method with some modification was required to meet the needs for synchronous and asynchronous learning.”(Abid et al. [101]. p. 380)
‘… I used my handicap (Handycam) to make a movie of myself while writing on my daughter’s small whiteboard and I played the video before giving my lecture on Google Meet.’(Ali and Ullah [100]. p. 149)
‘I have shifted to my mother’s house to manage space. She has a relatively bigger house. My three kids can attend classes there without any disturbance and I can also teach…’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 397)
It has given me time to reflect on things about myself…which I didn’t have time to think about before…I started regular exercise…and reading.(Sethi et al. [76]. p. 8)
‘I never imagined that we would be facing such a pandemic in this era or that I would be the one saving others’ lives. This has increased my passion for this noble profession. This pandemic gave us a chance to polish our skills and expertise. Although it’s a challenging time, it made us prove ourselves, not just in front of others but to ourselves.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 7)
‘We’re never grateful for what we have and keep on planning for a better future. This pandemic has made us realise the importance of health, family, and self-care.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 7)
‘This pandemic made our belief strong in the supremacy of God almighty as a lot of professionals had their plans to emigrate, to go for vacations. But they had to surrender in the face of God’s will.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 7)
3.7. Emergency Preparedness
‘How difficult it is to manage a number of courses…more flexibility is needed in giving deadlines.’(Abid et al. [101]. p. 377)
‘…adequate timeline, guidelines, and planning will yield effective results for the transition to virtual teaching.’(Abid et al. [101]. p. 378)
‘Schools should also provide affordable accommodation facilities for their teachers; this would be particularly productive for those employees who live with abusive partners.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 399)
‘Demand for family friendly childcare was seen as strong among employees while expanding the availability of affordable, quality childcare. The government, the country’s private and public sectors should provide solutions in this regard.’(IFC and PBC [102]. p. 37)
“Day cares be (can be) provided at offices to facilitate women …”(IFC and PBC [102]. p. 10)
‘… those who have worked get credit for their hard work, and those who didn’t become motivated to work next time.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 7)
‘As you know the world is very materialistic and people always need motivation…If the current situation is going to go on, we will need to give people an added incentive in the form of material compensation. This can either be more money or additional days off.’(Feroz et al. [104]. p. 7)
‘The response should be fast, special recruitment for coronavirus came after the peak months of the epidemic, due to which they suffered an additional load. Protective gear was rare during the initial days. And fear was at its peak, which created a lot of pressure on health care professionals. Therefore, the government should keep it [Personal Protective Equipment] now for any emergency situation in the future.’(Shahbaz et al. [99]. p. 7)
3.8. Capacity Building
‘Blended learning is a good option and the physical classroom must be replaced with online classrooms, and a mix of learning tools can be used by keeping online classes and sharing lecture details via emails. Within the model of blended learning, the importance of educational apps such as YouTube to reach students in remote areas was also emphasized.’(Abid et al. [101]. p. 382)
‘I think schools should allow teachers to take classes from schools. All teachers do not have enough space to teach online without any disturbance.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 397)
‘Schools should take a leading role in educating people about the issues of gender disparity through webinars or talks to parents to alert them to gender inequality at home and in wider society.’(Kalsoom [75]. p. 399)
‘Everyone is very stressed. I see it every time one of my staff has to take care of a suspected patient, they are hesitant and scared. Sometimes, I feel the same way myself. We need an integrated counselling program. People should not just come for counselling when they are mentally struggling. Similar to how we have guidelines for PPE [Personal Protective Equipment] and social distancing we should have small group talks on ZOOM so that we can dispel our anxieties before they build up.’(Feroz et al. [104]. p. 7)
‘Health care providers (doctors and nurses) of other sub-specialities (neurology, cardiac, surgery, orthopaedic) need to be trained as a backup to mitigate situations when entire internal medicine teams may be placed in self-quarantine due to COVID-19 exposure. In addition, a few key informants recommended that there should be a central backup plan for staff coverage in both COVID-19 and routine wards.’(Feroz et al. [104]. p. 6)
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Sr. No. | Authors | Title | Year | Source Title | Aims/Objectives | Discipline | Methodology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Kalsoom [75] | COVID-19: Experiences of teaching-mothers in Pakistan | 2022 | Journal of Gender Studies | 1. To investigate the experiences of teaching-mothers in Pakistan during the COVID-19 pandemic. 2. To understand the challenges they faced as professionals and as mothers | Teaching | In-depth online interviews |
2. | Sethi et al. [76] | Impact of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic on health professionals | 2020 | Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences | To find out the Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on health professionals personally and professionally along with the associated challenges | Health profession | Descriptive cross-sectional qualitative survey |
3. | Shahbaz et al. [99] | Psychosocial, emotional and professional Challenges faced by female health care professionals during the COVID-19 outbreak in Lahore, Pakistan: A qualitative study | 2021 | BMC Women’s Health | To discover the psychosocial, emotional and professional challenges faced by female health care professionals (HCPs) treating COVID-19 patients in Pakistan | Healthcare | Phenomenological methodology, Interviews semi-structured telephone-based qualitative interviews |
4. | Ali and Ullah [100] | Lived experiences of women academics during the COVID-19 pandemic in Pakistan | 2021 | Asian Journal of Social Science | To outline the disproportionate effects of COVID-19 on women academics | Teaching/higher education | In-depth semi-structured telephonic interviews |
5. | Abid et al. [101] | Online Teaching Experience during the COVID-19 in Pakistan: Pedagogy–Technology Balance and Student Engagement | 2021 | Fudan Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences | To explore the lived experiences of university teachers who participated in online teaching for the first time during the COVID-19 pandemic | Higher Education/ Teaching | Semi-structured interview |
6. | International Finance Corporation and The Pakistan Business Council [102] | Tackling childcare Pakistan: Creating family-friendly workplaces—A market study on the benefits and challenges of employer-supported childcare. | 2021 | International Finance Corporation | To better understand the state of family-friendly workplaces and the various childcare options available to employees in formal employment in Pakistan. | Multidisciplinary | Mixed method focus group discussions (FGDs) |
7. | Raza et al. [103] | Factors impeding healthcare professionals to effectively treat coronavirus disease 2019 patients in Pakistan: A qualitative investigation | 2020 | Frontiers in Psychology | To explore and understand the factors that impede HCPs to effectively treat COVID-19 patients in Karachi, Pakistan | Healthcare | A phenomenological Approach, semi-structured telephone-based qualitative interviews |
8. | Feroz et al. [104] | Perceptions and experiences of health care providers during COVID-19 pandemic in Karachi, Pakistan: An exploratory qualitative study | 2021 | BMJ Open | To explore health care provider’s perspectives and experiences of the barriers and facilitators to treat and manage COVID-19 cases. | Healthcare | Interviews |
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Criterion | Inclusion | Exclusion |
---|---|---|
Context | Studies conducted in the context of work–life balance during COVID-19 pandemic | Studies conducted on work–life balance but not in the perspective of COVID-19 |
Research Design | Qualitative Include qualitative part in case of mixed method design | Quantitative |
Date | December 2019 to April 2022 | Before December 2019 |
Language | English | Language other than English |
Publication source | Peer-reviewed | Non-peer reviewed |
Location | Pakistan | Other countries |
Category | Line by Line Coding | Descriptive Themes | Analytical Themes | Evidence in Studies | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
(A). | Barriers |
|
|
| [75,99,100] |
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
|
| [75,100] | ||
| |||||
| |||||
|
| ||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
|
| [76,100,101,102] | ||
| |||||
| |||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
| ||||
|
| ||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
|
| [5,76,99,100,103] | ||
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| |||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
| |||||
|
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(B). | Facilitators |
|
|
| [75,99,100,101,104] |
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| |||||
|
| ||||
| |||||
|
|
| [75,76,99,100,101] | ||
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|
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|
| ||||
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|
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(C). | Recommended Strategies |
|
|
| [99,101,102,104] |
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|
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| |||||
|
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| |||||
|
|
| [75,101,104] | ||
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| |||||
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Fazal, S.; Masood, S.; Nazir, F.; Majoka, M.I. Individual and Organizational Strategies for Promoting Work–Life Balance for Sustainable Workforce: A Systematic Literature Review from Pakistan. Sustainability 2022, 14, 11552. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811552
Fazal S, Masood S, Nazir F, Majoka MI. Individual and Organizational Strategies for Promoting Work–Life Balance for Sustainable Workforce: A Systematic Literature Review from Pakistan. Sustainability. 2022; 14(18):11552. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811552
Chicago/Turabian StyleFazal, Shawana, Sobia Masood, Farrukh Nazir, and Muhammad Iqbal Majoka. 2022. "Individual and Organizational Strategies for Promoting Work–Life Balance for Sustainable Workforce: A Systematic Literature Review from Pakistan" Sustainability 14, no. 18: 11552. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811552
APA StyleFazal, S., Masood, S., Nazir, F., & Majoka, M. I. (2022). Individual and Organizational Strategies for Promoting Work–Life Balance for Sustainable Workforce: A Systematic Literature Review from Pakistan. Sustainability, 14(18), 11552. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811552