Literature DB >> 24294128

Fathers' Contributions to Housework and Childcare and Parental Aggravation Among First-Time Parents.

Alfred Demaris1, Annette Mahoney, Kenneth I Pargament.   

Abstract

This study investigated the associations between fathers' contributions to housework and childcare and both spouses' parenting aggravation. It was hypothesized that greater father contributions to domestic labor would be associated with more paternal aggravation but less maternal aggravation. Data are from a four-wave study of 178 married couples undergoing the transition to first parenthood. Dyadic growth-curve models revealed gender differences in aggravation trajectories over the first year of the child's life. Fathers were higher in initial aggravation, but mothers' aggravation grew at a faster rate over time. The primary hypothesis was only partially supported. Fathers' contributions to childcare were associated with significantly lower maternal aggravation levels, but only among more religious mothers. Child fussiness and unpredictability were consistently significant predictors of higher aggravation for both parents. Depressive symptomatology was positively related to aggravation for fathers, whereas love for the spouse was associated with lower aggravation for mothers, controlling for other factors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  child temperament; growth-curve modeling; newborns; parental aggravation; religion; sanctification

Year:  2013        PMID: 24294128      PMCID: PMC3842184          DOI: 10.3149/fth.1102.179

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fathering        ISSN: 1537-6680


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5.  Doing the Scut Work of Infant Care: Does Religiousness Encourage Father Involvement?

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6.  A structural modeling approach to the understanding of parenting stress.

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7.  Family functioning and children's adjustment: associations among parents' depressed mood, marital hostility, parent-child hostility, and children's adjustment.

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9.  Parental hostility and its sources in psychologically abusive mothers: a test of the three-factor theory.

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10.  Longitudinal associations between parents' hostility and siblings' externalizing behavior in the context of marital discord.

Authors:  Melissa K Richmond; Clare M Stocker
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2.  Development and validation of the Maternal Distraction Questionnaire.

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