Engaged Dads Can Reduce Adolescent Behavioral Problems, Improve Well-Being

Authored by rutgers.edu and submitted by mvea
image for Engaged Dads Can Reduce Adolescent Behavioral Problems, Improve Well-Being

A new study examined the frequency of a father's engagement with their child and the associations between such engagement and the child's behavior.

In low-income families, fathers who are engaged in their children’s lives can help to improve their mental health and behavior, according to a Rutgers University–New Brunswick study published in the journal Social Service Review.

The researchers found that adolescents in low-income families whose fathers are more frequently engaged in feeding, reading, playing and other activities and who provide necessities such as clothes and food throughout their childhood have fewer behavioral and emotional problems -- reducing a significant gap between poor families and those with higher socioeconomic status.

“On average, children in lower socioeconomic status families tend to have more behavior problems and their fathers have lower levels of overall involvement than those in higher socioeconomic status families,” said lead author Lenna Nepomnyaschy, an associate professor at Rutgers University–New Brunswick’s School of Social Work and a core faculty member at the Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research.

The researchers analyzed data on the long-term behavior of 5,000 children born between 1998 and 2000. They focused on the frequency of their fathers’ engagement, from ages 5 to 15, through feeding, playing, reading and helping with homework, and providing noncash items as clothes, toys, food and other necessities. They reviewed the associations between such engagement and the children’s internalizing and externalizing behaviors, including crying, worrying, fighting, bullying and skipping school.

Lenna Nepomnyaschy, lead author of the study, is an associate professor at the School of Social Work.

According to Nepomnyaschy, fathers with lower education, lower skilled jobs and lower wages may find it difficult to engage in their children’s lives due to social and economic changes over the last several decades. These changes have resulted in the loss of manufacturing jobs, a decline in union power and criminal justice policies linked to mass incarceration, particularly among men of color.

The researchers urged policymakers, scholars and the public to consider wage, employment and criminal justice policies that increase the opportunity for men to engage with their children to improve their well-being.

The study was co-authored by researchers from Boston University, Cornell University and the University of Buffalo and was part of a larger project funded by a grant from the William T. Grant Foundation

Jdawgred on December 14th, 2020 at 13:16 UTC »

Present dads are also the biggest factor in keeping males from turning to crime

newsensequeen on December 14th, 2020 at 12:48 UTC »

Could this study be counted same for step dads?

LongNectarine3 on December 14th, 2020 at 12:19 UTC »

My father raised me and my younger siblings when I was fifteen and my mom died. The older ones were in college about to start careers. He was a great provider. He had his issues but he went to work everyday. I expected child services to remove us but he kept at it. My twin dropped out, started to abuse drugs. My other brother dropped out. I missed half of my junior year. He kept fighting on, he got both my brothers back in school. He brought me to a doctor. He never quit being stable. I could always tell you where he was at depending on the time of day.

My brothers are a mining engineer, computer programmer, Career high ranked military, parole officer, tax agent and the lead janitor (actually proudest of him as he had the most obstacles). I got a couple of graduate degrees and was working as a grant manager when he was alive (bad car accident left me without my career).

He was wonderful come to think of it. It was hard for me, as the girl I was expected to clean. He paid me after he realized what he was asking of me. It was years later, but he fixed any resentments.

He tried. We noticed that. The entire church was full at his funeral. We weren’t the only ones who noticed.

I miss him so

Edit: thank you for the award kind redditor. Again thank you. Edit: thank you again. And again.