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Published 07:00 15 Jul 2019 BST
Updated 11:52 15 Jul 2019 BST

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This pattern was repeated when it came to household chores too, with men taking 35 percent of their time off when women were in charge, but women only took 19 percent of their time off when men were in charge.
This discrepancy, the researchers theorise, might boil down to decreased pressure to get things done on the weekends. This is what assistant professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Jill Yavorsky, had to say about the study:
"On non-workdays, parents are more evenly splitting housework and childcare," Yavorsky explains. "It's very much 'all hands on deck,' but when there is more time available on the weekend and parents are not so pressed to get everything done, then we see the emergence of gendered patterns and inequality where women do a lot more housework and childcare while he leisures."These old-fashioned baby names are making a comeback in 2026
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