On front lines, women feel COVID-19's sting
Women hold the majority of jobs on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic, and they are also bearing the brunt of its economic toll.
Three-quarters of health care workers are female. Women not only make up most of the hospitals' staff, but the bulk of nursing home and home care workers. They also hold a large portion of the service industry roles, including restaurant servers, hotel housekeepers and salon workers -- jobs that businesses quickly cut as customers plummeted and closures began.
Over the past three weeks, nearly 39,000 more women than men have applied for unemployment in
The
"This is a big financial problem," Farah said. "If this continues, then it looks like more families are going to have so many problems."
Men are more likely to get sick and die from the coronavirus, studies show. But some fear the financial damage to women could have a lasting impact on the wealth disparity between genders. Women nationally earn
"If you earn less, you have less to save. And right now people are depending upon their savings," said
At Yumi Sushi in
For the first time in her life, Cheney is facing the possibility that she cannot afford rent at her St. Paul apartment. There was an issue with her unemployment insurance application and she hasn't received a payment yet. She applied for a loan, and is worried about her credit score. She planned to buy a home in a couple of years.
"We need this money now, so we don't get behind. So we don't ruin our futures," she said.
In the second week of March, before the coronavirus closures started in earnest, just one-third of people applying for unemployment insurance in
The jump was likely due in part to a high number of workers seeking help from the leisure, hospitality and personal services industries, all sectors with large portions of female employees, according to DEED spokeswoman
The rule of thumb is people should have three to six months of income to fall back on, but many people don't have that safety net, said
"This is going to change the face of the salon industry. Things will be different," Brinkhaus said. Some salons will close and independent contractors could go back to working as employees, she predicted.
In some female-dominated sectors, COVID-19 is exacerbating long-standing problems.
Workers in the home care field long have been underpaid and small home care agencies often don't provide staff health insurance or paid sick time, said
Gov.
For many families, Walz extended a lifeline by requiring otherwise shuttered schools to continue providing care for the children of emergency workers, such as nurses, home care aids and nursing home staff.
Her parents and husband, who works 12-hour shifts as a police officer, share the responsibility. But kids often gravitate to their mom first, Allen said. When it comes to juggling kids and work, she said, "That's just what we as women do ... No matter what career field you are in, we've risen to the occasion."
But Allen's field is now more demanding than most. She spends her days at the newly-converted
It's still quiet enough that she has time to spend one-on-one, washing a patient's hair or rubbing their back. She knows that won't last long.
A study published by the
Allen said government leaders should make sure health care workers have resources to deal with the trauma they encounter. She said some nurses have tried working at
"I don't really feel like there's a good support system in place for after we get through everything," Allen said. "I'm super scared every day I go to work. And you don't ever know what you're going to see."
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