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Absent Fathers Faulted
The absence of fathers in early life appears
to be a more significant risk factor for girls’ early sexual
activity and adolescent pregnancy than previously believed, according
to researchers at Duke, Indiana, and Auburn universities and in
New Zealand. “We knew that a number of studies had identified
the link between absent fathers and risk for daughters’ early
sexual activity, but the risk had been ascribed to more generalized
family problems, such as poverty and stress,” says Kenneth
A. Dodge Ph.D. ’78, director of the Center for Child and
Family Policy at Duke’s Terry Sanford Institute of Public
Policy. Dodge was one of the principal investigators of the study. “Our
research shows clearly that father absence itself during the first
five years of life is a unique risk factor.”
Dodge, Bruce J. Ellis of the University of Canterbury in Christchurch,
New Zealand, and a team of researchers analyzed data from two long-term
studies that followed 242 girls in the United States and 520 girls
in New Zealand. Among industrialized nations, the U.S. and New
Zealand have the highest and second-highest rates of teenage pregnancy,
respectively. Based on multiple interviews and questionnaires administered
over the years to both parents and children, the data covered everything
from family demographics to parenting styles and child behavioral
problems to childhood academic performance. The study results appeared
in the May issue of Child Development.
Dodge, Ellis, and colleagues noted that girls whose fathers left
the family earlier in their lives—before the age of six—had
the highest rates of both early sexual activity and adolescent
pregnancy, followed by those whose fathers left at a later age,
followed by girls whose fathers were present. “Clearly, it
is not just the father’s absence, but the timing of that
absence that is critical,” Dodge says.
“
This issue may be especially relevant to predicting rates of teenage
pregnancy, which were seven to eight times higher among early father-absent
girls, but only two to three times higher among later father-absent
girls, than among father-present girls,” says Ellis.
Even when the researchers took into account other factors that
could have contributed to early sexual activity and pregnancy,
such as behavioral problems and life adversity, early “father-absent” girls
were still about five times more likely in the United States and
three times more likely in New Zealand to experience an adolescent
pregnancy than were father-present girls.
The researchers suggested several reasons to explain the results.
One is that the longer the fathers are absent, the greater the
daughters’ exposure to their mothers’ dating and future
relationship behaviors; this exposure may encourage an earlier
onset of sexual behavior in daughters. Another possibility is that
girls whose fathers are absent may undergo early personality changes
that orient them toward early and unstable bonds with men.
The research may also have strong implications for policymakers: “These
findings may support social policies that encourage fathers to
form and remain in families with their children (unless the marriage
is ‘highly conflictual or violent’),” the study
notes.
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