Period Pain and Emotional Labour
Summary
To answer a growing call for more research on the influence of menstruation at work,
especially in emotionally demanding professions, this study investigates the relationship
between period pain and emotional labour to help inform effective workplace policies.
Drawing from the Conservation of Resources (COR) theory (Hobfoll, 1989), which states that
individuals strive to obtain, maintain, and protect their resources and that the threat of possibly
losing resources causes stress, the primary objective of this cross-sectional study is to examine
whether there is a relationship between period pain and emotional labour (surface acting and
deep acting). In addition, we investigate whether this relationship can be partly explained by
presenteeism and what the role of adjustment latitude is in this relationship. We conducted a
cross-sectional study using an online survey from which data was analysed using a multiple
regression analysis (N = 250). The findings indicate that period pain is positively related with
both surface acting (b = .58, p<.001) and deep acting (b = .37, p<.001). Presenteeism did not
mediate the relationship between period pain and either form of emotional labour, neither
surface acting (p = .28) nor deep acting (p = .78). However, presenteeism was found to be
positively related to period pain (b = 1.54, p<.001). Adjustment latitude did not significantly
moderate the relationship between period pain and presenteeism (95% CI [-.002, .01]), but did
relate negatively to presenteeism (b = -.20, p<.01). This study contributes to the understanding
of how menstruating employees allocate resources to manage period pain in the workplace.
Further research is essential for a more comprehensive understanding and more effective
workplace policies.
Keywords: adjustment latitude, emotional labour, period pain, presenteeism