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6 J.L. & Fam. Stud. 213 (2004)
Gender Complementarity and Child-Rearing: Where Tradition and Science Agree

handle is hein.journals/jlfst6 and id is 219 raw text is: Gender Complementarity and Child-rearing:
Where Tradition and Science Agree
A. Dean Byrd, Ph.D, MBA, MPH*
I. INTRODUCTION
The notion that all family forms are equally as helpful or healthful for
children has no basis in science. Indeed, there is no better example than the
extensive research on children reared in single-parent families. The most au-
thoritative evidence on children growing up in single-parent families (most
often headed by single mothers) concluded that such children are three times
more likely to have a child out of wedlock, twice as likely to drop out of high
school, 1.4 times more likely to be idle (out of school and out of work) and 2.5
times more likely to be teen mothers. Lest one might suggest that the lower
socio-economic level of children alone accounts for such statistics, these con-
clusions were reached subsequent to adjustments for income-related variables
such as race, sex, mother's/father's education, number of siblings, and place of
residence (McLanahan & Sandefur, 1994). Perhaps, if we follow these statis-
tics further, another picture emerges. Of children born out-of-wedlock, their
chances of living in poverty are five times greater than that of growing up
within intact families. Additionally, children born out of wedlock have a two to
three times greater probability of having psychiatric problems as adolescents
(Popenoe, 1996). Following this statistic even further, early sexual activity
poses a great danger for adolescent health. Adolescents account for more than
25 percent of all sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) nationally. Women are
twice as likely as men to acquire gonorrhea, chlamydia and hepatitis. Many
STDs generate increased risk of one developing certain cancers, becoming in-
fertile, and contracting HIV upon exposure. Tragically, STDs are passed on by
women to their children at birth. We could carry this scenario further and in-
clude excellent data on single parenting and child abuse, single parenting and
violence. While it is clear that there are cases where children reared by single
parents do well, such cases are the exception rather than the rule. The evidence
shown by the substantial majority of children reared in single-parent homes is
very clear: this one family form places children at substantial risks (Popenoe,
1996).
* Dr. Byrd is President of the Thrasher Research Fund and Clinical Professor of Medicine,
University of Utah School of Medicine with appointments in the Department of Family and
Preventive Medicine and in the Department of Psychiatry. In addition, Dr. Byrd has an adjunct
appointment in the Department of Family Studies.
213

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