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Women who quit maquiladora work on the U.S.-Mexico border: Assessing health, occupation, and social dimensions in two transnational electronics plants

✍ Scribed by Sylvia Guendelman; Steven Samuels; Martha Ramirez


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
74 KB
Volume
33
Category
Article
ISSN
0271-3586

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✦ Synopsis


This cohort study of 725 women examined the health, occupational, and social factors that contribute to quitting work in two transnational electronics maquiladoras (assembly plants) in Tijuana, Mexico. The estimated cumulative probabilities of quitting were 68% and 81% by 1 and 2 years of employment. After adjusting for other factors, women who had a history of smoking or surgery and those who returned to work after a paid leave due to illness were more likely to quit. In contrast, women with a history of chronic illness had lower quitting rates. The nationality of the company and the work shift also significantly influenced quitting rates, but demographic characteristics and health care visits did not have a significant effect. Women selectively leave maquiladora employment, often due to health-related events. The healthy worker effect is diffıcult to measure in a mobile population with high turnover. Am. J. Ind.