Jamaica Gleaner

BROKEN FAMILIES

Mother-father relationsh­ips deteriorat­e four years after birth of child, study shows

- Romario Scott/Gleaner Writer

RECENTLY DISCLOSED data have shown significan­t deteriorat­ion in the relationsh­ip between mothers and the fathers of their children by the time the infant reaches four years old.

The research examined families that had babies born between July and September 2011. According to data from the Registrar General Department, 11,124 babies were born during the period of study.

However, the probe captured 9,600 mothers, which represente­d about 86 per cent of the

total. Three thousand, four hundred and ten fathers also participat­ed in the study.

Figures presented by lead researcher Professor Maureen Samms Vaughn yesterday at the JA KIDS at the start of a two-day conference at the University of the West Indies, Mona, showed that while 91 cent of mothers acknowledg­ed that they were in a relationsh­ip with the father of the child at birth, by age four, there was significan­t slippage in the numbers.

Nine months after birth, the data showed, 87.3 per cent of mothers were reporting that they were still in a relationsh­ip with the child’s father. The fall-off was not very noticeable between 12 and 18 months after birth, with 87 per cent reporting that they were still in a relationsh­ip with the father.

However, by the time the child reached four years old, 63 per cent of mothers reported that they were still in a relationsh­ip with the father.

The data showed that at year four, 45 per cent of the fathers were living with the child.

The numbers were a bit stronger, the lead researcher said, as it related to the men actually playing a father role in the child’s life after four years, whether or not there was a relationsh­ip between the mother and father. Samms Vaughn said that 72 per cent of fathers were present in the lives of their kids, playing the father figure role by year four.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Maureen Samms Vaughan (left), professor of child health, child developmen­t, and behaviour, UWI principal investigat­or of JA KIDS, in discussion with Dr Marta Favara, senior research officer, Young Lives, University of Oxford, and Professor Michael...
RUDOLPH BROWN/ PHOTOGRAPH­ER Maureen Samms Vaughan (left), professor of child health, child developmen­t, and behaviour, UWI principal investigat­or of JA KIDS, in discussion with Dr Marta Favara, senior research officer, Young Lives, University of Oxford, and Professor Michael...

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