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Self-employed men are more likely to have employees than self-employed women. But the difference has less to do with with being male or female than with the kinds of business than men and women start.
Study finds that self-employed women are at more risk of suffering from poor mental health. getty. Freelance work is growing rapidly. According to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2018/2019 ...
New research finds that self-employed women have fewer risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared to non-self-employed women, suggesting that the work environment may play a role in ...
It turned out that self-employed women in the study were, in fact, more likely to be uninsured: 9% were, vs 5% of other women. But that did not account for the differences in their health.
Self-employed women tend to have completed a higher level of education than women with wage and salary jobs, according to a new study by the Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy ...
A recent study suggests that women who are self-employed have lower risk factors for heart disease. Here's why that might be, according to new research.
Self-employed women have fewer risk factors for cardiovascular disease compared to non-self-employed women, suggesting that the work environment may play a role in the development of risk factors ...
Self-employed white women grew by .6 percentage points. Meanwhile, the number of childcare workers has shrunk by 88,000, or 8.4%, from the sector’s pre-pandemic workforce, according to a Sept. 2 ...
White women who were self-employed had a 7.4% lower risk of obesity, 7% lower risk of being physically inactive, and 9.4% drop in having poor sleep. The change in risk was slightly different for ...