The Citizen (KZN)

Shorter lives for single dads

PREMATURE DEATH RISK THREE TIMES HIGHER THAN SINGLE MOMS OR PAIRED-UP DADS

- Paris A stiff drink

The risk of dying prematurel­y more than doubles for single fathers compared with single mothers or pairedup dads, according to a study of Canadian families published yesterday.

“Our research highlights that single fathers have higher mortality and demonstrat­es the need for public health policies to help identify and support these men,” said lead author Maria Chiu, a scientist at the University of Toronto. The findings, published in The

Lancet Public Health, may apply to wealthy nations with similar ratios of single-parent families to Canada, the researcher­s said.

Chiu and colleagues tracked nearly 40 500 people across Canada over 11 years. The subjects, who included 4 590 single moms and 871 single dads, were, on average, in their early 40s when the study began.

Nearly 700 had died by the end of the monitoring period. Compared to partnered fathers or single moms, the death rate was three times higher among single fathers.

Factoring in that solo dads tended to be older, had higher cancer rates, and were more prone to heart disease, the researcher­s concluded their mortality risk was still twice as high.

Likely culprits include poor lifestyle choices and stress, Chiu said.

“We did find that single fathers tended to have unhealthie­r lifestyles,” which could include poor diet, lack of exercise, or excessive drinking, she said.

Men parenting on their own were more likely to be separated, divorced or widowed than single mothers – a larger proportion of whom raise babies conceived outside of a relationsh­ip, the team found.

Having experience­d a break-up is a risk factor for mental ill health. “These results show that single fathers might be a particular­ly vulnerable group,” Rachel Simpson, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of Oxford, commented in the same journal.

Making matters worse, a 2016 study showed that go-it-alone dads, even if they acknowledg­e being in poor shape, physically and mentally, are less likely to seek profession­al help than women.

Single-parent households have become more common across the developed world in recent decades.

In the US, for example, the percentage of children living with single mothers nearly tripled from 8% percent in 1960 to 23% in 2016, according to the US Census.

The percentage living with single fathers increased from one to four over the same period.

In Europe, Denmark tops the list of single-parent households which make up 30% of the total.

Of those, 23% are headed by women and 7% by men, according to the OECD rich country grouping.

The correspond­ing percentage­s are 19 and four for France; 14 and five for Sweden, 17 and two for Germany; 16 and three for Canada.

Rates of single-parenthood are even higher in many low-income nations, especially in Africa, according to Joseph Chamie, former director of the UN Population Division.

Close to 40% of children in South Africa, for example, have their mother as the sole parent, and 4% percent have only a dad.

Other countries with a large share of single-parent households include Mozambique (36%), Dominican Republic (35%), Liberia (31%) and Kenya (30%), he noted in a 2016 report.

“Of the world’s 2.3 billion children, 14% – or 320 million – are living in a single-parent household.”

In at least two categories, single fathers hold a slight edge over solo moms.

Researcher­s at the University of Illinois in the US found that mothers on their own make about two-thirds of what their male counterpar­ts earn.

And a study in South Korea, published in PLOS ONE, showed single mothers were three times more likely to become alcohol-dependent. –

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 ??  ?? TAKING STRAIN. Single fathers are more prone to bad diet, lack of exercise and excessive drinking.
TAKING STRAIN. Single fathers are more prone to bad diet, lack of exercise and excessive drinking.

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