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Study Says Broken
Homes Harm Kids More
LONDON (AP)
-- Children growing up in single-parent families are twice as likely
as their counterparts to develop serious psychiatric illnesses and
addictions later in life, according to an important new study.
Researchers
have for years debated whether children from broken homes bounce
back or whether they are more likely than kids whose parents stay
together to develop serious emotional problems.
Experts say
the latest study, published this week in The Lancet medical journal,
is important mainly because of its unprecedented scale and follow-up
-- it tracked about 1 million children for a decade, into their
mid-20s.
The question
of why and how those children end up with such problems remains
unanswered. The study suggests that financial hardship may play
a role, but other experts say the research also supports the view
that quality of parenting could be a factor.
The study used
the Swedish national registries, which cover almost the entire population
and contain extensive socio-economic and health information. Children
were considered to be living in a single-parent household if they
were living with the same single adult in both the 1985 and 1990
housing census. That could have been the result of divorce, separation,
death of a parent, out of wedlock birth, guardianship or other reasons.
About 60,000
were living with their mother and about 5,500 with their father.
There were 921,257 living with both parents. The children were aged
between 6 and 18 at the start of the study, with half already in
their teens.
The scientists
found that children with single parents were twice as likely as
the others to develop a psychiatric illness such as severe depression
or schizophrenia, to kill themselves or attempt suicide, and to
develop an alcohol-related disease.
Girls were three
times more likely to become drug addicts if they lived with a sole
parent, and boys were four times more likely.
The researchers
concluded that financial hardship, which they defined as renting
rather than owning a home and as being on welfare, made a big difference.
However, other
experts questioned the financial influence, saying Swedish single
mothers are not poor when compared with those in other countries,
and suggested that quality of parenting could also be a factor.
"It makes
you think that what you're seeing is just the most dysfunctional
families having these problems, rather than the low income. The
money is really an indicator of something else," said Sara
McLanahan, a professor of sociology and public affairs at Princeton
University, who was not involved in the study.
"If you
really thought that it was the income that makes the difference,
you would think that Swedish lone mothers would do a lot better
than the British or those in the U.S., but they look very similar,"
she said.
Other experts
agreed.
In the last
20 to 30 years, poverty has been greatly reduced everywhere in Europe,
but psychiatric problems in children have not, said Dr. Stephen
Scott, a child health and behavior researcher at the Institute of
Psychiatry in London, who also was not involved in the study.
He said that
in previous studies, once researchers have adjusted their results
to eliminate the influence of bad parenting, any increased risk
of emotional problems shrinks markedly. This, he said, indicates
it is not so much single parenthood but the quality of parenting
that is at issue.
"The kind
of people who end up as single parents might not have done well
by their kids, even if they hadn't ended up alone. They tend to
be more critical in their relationships, more derogatory toward
other people," Scott said, adding that it is also harder to
be a warm, non-critical parent when you're bringing up a child alone.
However, he
noted that there are plenty of children from single-parent families
who don't end up with serious emotional problems.
There may also
be a genetic element: More irritable people are more likely to become
separated, but they are also more likely, whether they are separated
or not, to have more irritable children, Scott said.
"The whole
field is highly debated. This is another piece in that debate that
makes several important points -- firstly that there really is an
increased risk in young adulthood of pretty bad things. It also
indicates it's not all about the money, but may be about the people
themselves," McLanahan said.
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