
Low-Income Dads Are Involved With Their Kids, Study Finds
Link here. Excerpt:
'A new study finds that low-income, urban fathers in the United States take an active role in their children's health and encourage them to eat healthy foods and exercise.
But the study also found that when their kids are sick, some of these dads may not give recommended doses of medicine to their children and may feel ill-equipped to handle emergency medical care.
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine researchers studied 31 fathers, most of them black and Hispanic, average age 31, in Chicago and Milwaukee. About 40 percent of the men earned $34,999 or less a year.
More than half of the fathers said they tried to encourage physical activity and engage their children in play to promote good health. They said they tried to set a good example because they know their behavior influences their children's habits.
...
Fathers are playing an increasingly larger role in childcare, and health care providers must include and educate fathers as key players in their children's health, rather than focusing so much on mothers, the researchers said.
...
The low-income fathers in this small study were more involved in their kids health and health care than researchers expected.
"There's a bias to assume lower-income dads, particularly in unmarried families, are not involved with their children," Garfield said. "But that's not the case. Recent research has shown the vast majority of dads will attend the birth of their kids whether or not the men are married to the mother. Our research goes further to say they really are involved day to day with their kids in ways that affect their health and development."'
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Can't report positive re fathers without negative it seems
"some of these dads may not give recommended doses of medicine to their children and may feel ill-equipped to handle emergency medical care"
Never fails. So mothers are never caught short in any dept. re parenting? If so, it's "society's fault", or of course, their husbands'. Never seen a study that lauded dads that also did not denigrate them in some way. It's almost like it's a req't to get published.