The following statistics support that our children suffer from lack of two
parent households from -
PSYCHOLOGICAL HEALTH PROBLEMS
1. GREAT PSYCHOLOGICAL PROBLEMS
A. Single parent children 3 to 4 times more likely to have emotional or
behavioral problems ( Zill and Schoenborn,
Statistics, 1990)
B. 84% of teens hospitalized for psychiatric care come from single parent
homes (1989 study, cited by Hewlett, When the Bough Breaks)
2. HIGHER SUICIDE RATE
A. Teens who attempt suicide similar to non-suicidal teens in age, income,
race or religion, are more likely to have little or minimal contact with
their father (Study of 752 families by New York Psychiatric Institute,
cited by Hewlett)
B. 75% of teens who commit suicide are from single parent homes (Elshtain,
The Christian Century, 1993)
3. MORE ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE
A. 18% of children with strict and involved fathers used drugs
B. 35% of children without fathers used drugs (1988 UCLA study, cited by
Hewlett)
C. Children in father-absent homes are 4.3 times more likely to smoke as
children in father-present (
15-year-olds)
4. GREAT FREQUENCY OF SLEEP DISORDERS
A. More trouble falling asleep, more nightmares, and night terrors
(Psychiatrist Alfred Messer, cited by Hewlett)
5. PERSISTENT FEELINGS OF BETRAYAL, REJECTION, RAGE, GUILT, PAIN
A. Lasting for years with a renewed intensity at adolescence
B. Two-thirds [of father-absent children] yearned for the absent parent,
one-half of those with an intensity we found profoundly moving.
(Wallerstein and Kelly, 1980, Surviving the Breakup)
6. LOWER SELF-ESTEEM
A. Especially true for girls (Dr. Robert Fay presentation at NCMC
conference, 1992) (Davidson, Life Without Father:
Catastrophe, Policy Review, 1990)
COGNITIVE/ACADEMIC ABILITY
1. LOWER ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
A. 38% of elementary students from single parent homes were low achieving,
while 23 % of both parent children were low achieving (Nat'l Assoc. of
Elementary School Principals report, city by Hewlett)
B. 30% of children from father-present homes were high achieving, while
only 17% of children from father-absent homes were high achieving.
2. LOWER MATH SCORES
A. (
Fleming, 1968)
3. GREATER FAILURE RATE
A. Elementary students from fatherless homes or homes with mother and a
stepfather have to repeat
B. (
Deborah grades at a rate 2-3 times higher than children with both
biological parents Dawson,1991)
4. LOWER SAT SCORES
A. "Dramatic" lower scores for students from father-absent homes (
University and
father-absent homes and 760 from father-present homes, cited by Hewlett)
5. LOWER IQ AND ACHIEVEMENT
A. Children who lost fathers before age 5 scored lower on Otis Quick Test
and Stanford Achievement Test as junior-high and high-school students
(Santrock, 1972) (Hetherington, Cox, and Cox study, 1978) (Cortes and
Fleming, 1968)
6. MORE LIKELY TO DROP OUT OF SCHOOL
A. Children from fatherless homes twice as likely to drop out of school (
US Department of Health and Human Services, Survey on Child Health, 1993)
7. LESS LIKELY TO ATTEND COLLEGE
A. (Wallerstein, Family Law Quarterly, 1986)
ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR
1. HIGHER RATES OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR
a. Fatherless children are twice as likely to become criminally involved
(Margaret Wynn, 1964) -72% of adolescent murderers, 60% of rapists, and 70%
of long-term prisoners grew up in father-absent homes (US Department of
Justice data, 1991)
2. GREATER DELINQUENCY FOR BOYS
A. 87% of
homes (Wisconsin Department of Health and Social Services, 1994)
B. 70% of juveniles in state reform institutions grew up in father-absent
homes (US Department of Justice data, 1988)
C. young black men raised without a father are twice as likely to engage in
criminal activities (Hill and O'Neill, 1993) (Matlock in Adolescence)
(Siegman, 1966; Anderson, 1968; Kelly and Baer, 1969)
3. GREATER DELINQUENCY FOR GIRLS
A. (Monahan, 1957; Toby, 1957)
4. MORE VIOLENT MISBEHAVIOR IN SCHOOL
A. Children who exhibited violent misbehavior in school were 11 times as
likely to live without their father than children who did not violently
misbehave (Sheline, Skipper, Broadhead, Aamerican Journal of Public Health,
1994)
CHILD ABUSE
1. GREATER CHANCE OF BEING PHYSICALLY ABUSED
A. Preschoolers living without their biological father were 40 times more
likely to be a victim of child abuse as compared to like-aged children
living with their father (Wilson and Daly in Child Abuse and Neglect:
Biosocial Dimensions, 1987)
B. Premarital pregnancy, out-of-wedlock childbearing, and absent fathers
are the most common predictors of child abuse (Smith, Hanson, and Noble,
Child Abuse: Commission and Omission, 1980)
2. GREATER CHANCE OF BEING SEXUALLY ABUSED
A. 69% of victims of child sexual abuse came from homes where the
biological father was absent (Gomes-Schwartz, Horowitz, and Cardarelli,
Child Sexual Abuse Victims and their Treatment, 1988)
1. MORE DIFFICULTY IN INTERACTING WITH MEN AND MALE PEERS
A. Daughters of divorcees aggressive, forward with boys and men
B. Daughters of widows shy and timid with boys and men (Hetherington, 1972)
2. YOUNGER MARRIAGES
A. Daughter of divorcees marry at younger age (Hetherington, 1972)
3. MORE UNWED PREGNANCY
A. Girls from fatherless homes 111% (over 2X) more likely to have unwed
pregnancy (Warren Farrell presentation at NCMC conference, 1992;
Hetherington, 1972)
4. HIGHER DIVORCE RATES
A. Girls from fatherless home 92% (nearly 2X) more likely to divorce
(Warren Farrell presentation at NCMC conference, 1992; Hetherington,1972)
1. LESS MASCULINE, MORE DEPENDENT BEHAVIOR
A. (Santrock's study of 4- and 5-year old, father-absent boys) (
Long's study of 6- too 15-year-old boys where father employed away from
home community, 1968) (Hetherington's study of 9- to 12-year-old,
father-absent boys, 1966)
1. MORE LIKELY TO SUFFER ACCIDENTS AND INJURIES
A. Fatherless children 20-30% more likely to experience accidents,
injuries, and poisonings that did father-present children (Remez, Family
Planning Perspectives, 1992)
B. Compared to children living with father, fatherless children experience
more accidental injury, asthma, frequent headaches, and speech defects
(Dawson, Journal of Marriage and Family, 1991)
This information is maintained by Wisconsin Fathers for Children and Families
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