| Literature DB >> 30453979 |
Joshua Jeong1, Saima Siyal2, Günther Fink3,4, Dana Charles McCoy5, Aisha K Yousafzai6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parents are the primary providers of nurturing care for young children's healthy early development. However, the literature on parenting in early childhood, especially in low- and middle-income countries, has primarily focused on mothers. In this study, we investigate how parents make meaning of fathers' parenting roles with regards to their young children's early health and development in rural Pakistan.Entities:
Keywords: Early child development; Fathers; Pakistan; Parenting; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30453979 PMCID: PMC6245824 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6143-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Study sample
| Younger children (0–2 years) | Older children (3–5 years) | Any children under-5 years | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | Male | Female | ||
| In-depth interviews with 33 families or 63 individuals ( | |||||
| Co-residential fathers | |||||
| Low paternal education (less than secondary school) | 3 | 4 | 4 | 3 | |
| High paternal education (completed secondary school or higher) | 3 | 3 | 4 | 3 | |
| Non-residential fathers | 6 | ||||
| Focus group discussions with 14 individuals ( | |||||
| One fathers group with low education | 7 | ||||
| One mothers group with low education | 7 | ||||
Sociodemographic characteristics of sample from in-depth interviews with 33 families
| Characteristics | Mean or N | SD or % | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Father characteristics ( | |||
| Father’s age (years) | 33.3 | 7.8 | 18–50 |
| Father’s education | |||
| None | 4 | 13.3% | |
| Complete primary | 10 | 33.3% | |
| Complete secondary | 7 | 23.3% | |
| Higher than secondary | 9 | 30.0% | |
| Father’s employment status | |||
| Agriculture | 11 | 33.3% | |
| Casual or day labor | 11 | 33.3% | |
| Office job | 4 | 12.1% | |
| Teacher | 3 | 9.1% | |
| Army | 2 | 6.1% | |
| Landlord | 1 | 3.0% | |
| Service industry | 1 | 3.0% | |
| Father residential status | |||
| Residential | 27 | 81.8% | |
| Non-residential | 6 | 18.2% | |
| Mother characteristics ( | |||
| Mother’s age (years) | 29.5 | 5.9 | 20–40 |
| Mother’s education | |||
| None | 19 | 59.4% | |
| Incomplete primary | 2 | 6.3% | |
| Complete primary | 5 | 15.6% | |
| Complete secondary | 5 | 15.6% | |
| Higher than secondary | 1 | 3.1% | |
| Mother’s employment status | |||
| None | 30 | 93.8% | |
| Lady health worker | 1 | 3.1% | |
| Teacher | 1 | 3.1% | |
| Child characteristics (N = 33) | |||
| Child is female | 16 | 48.5% | |
| Child age | |||
| 0–2 years | 18 | 54.5% | |
| 3–5 years | 15 | 45.5% | |
| Child’s number of siblings | 2 | 0.6 | 0–6 |
| Household characteristics ( | |||
| Household size | 10.1 | 4.2 | 4–20 |
| Household income (PKR) | 16,717 | 12,192 | 4,000–45,000 |
| Household composition | |||
| Nuclear family | 7 | 21.2% | |
| Joint family structure | 26 | 78.8% | |
Note: 1 USD is approximately 107 PKR
Fig. 1Parenting roles and responsibilities, ranging from most dominantly paternal-exclusive to most dominantly maternal-exclusive. Bolded activities represent those that were commonly reported across interviews, which are elaborated upon in the paper
Select illustrative quotes supporting the most salient paternal, maternal, and shared parenting roles
| Themes with supporting quotes | Respondent |
|---|---|
| Paternal role | |
| Providing | |
| I go for labor and earn money, and when I come back [home] I bring important things for the child. I bring fruits, like bananas and oranges, cerelac, milk, or vegetables like ladyfinger and spinach. I get these so that he becomes healthy. | Family 25, father |
| Children tell him [father], “We want this, we want that”. He goes and gets things like ice cream and sometimes chips to make them happy. He takes good care of them. | Family 24, mother |
| Taking child out | |
| I take [child’s name] for outings and show her different things, and then I show her trucks and ask her what that is so that her mind works. I show her the fields and teach her the names of things, like, “This is this, you call this this.” | Family 21, father |
| I take him [out] so that the environment changes. When I take him out, he will see things because he gets bored at home all day, and he will have a fresh mind. | Family 32, father |
| When I come home he [child] says to me, “Father take me to the shop”. Then I take him to the shop. He also says that he wants to take the goats outside and play with them or give grains to the cow, so I take him there. | Family 8, father |
| Playing | |
| It’s my responsibility that I play with my child because I’m his father. I give him love and affection otherwise the child will think that my father maintains a distance from me. He’s my child. | Family 27, father |
| My child enjoys and also waits for me to come and play. My child gets happy and I get happy by seeing the child too. | Family 34, father |
| Maternal role | |
| Feeding | |
| Look, out of 24 h, a child is with his mother for 18 h. The mother feeds him, so he is closer to his mother. The mother communicates with the child… a mother’s role is more important. | Family 17, mother |
| ...because she knows everything about the child, like what he should eat and what he shouldn’t eat. The mother knows better. | Family 6, father |
| Other child care activities | |
| Mother is responsible because she is all the time at home with the child. She knows what her child wants, what doesn’t he want, what he needs, what time will he eat, what time does he sleep, what time the child has to be cleaned, when to give him a bath. All the responsibilities are of the mother. Poor father is earning and he doesn’t know. | Family 24, mother |
| His mother is more responsible because she spends more time with him. From morning to 6, I am busy. During that time I come home for half an hour, but he stays with his mother more so she will be better able to observe | Family 20, father |
| House chores | |
| He does the outside work and gets everything for me. Cooking the food and feeding him is the mother’s task. A mother is at home so she will do that. She will take more care of a child. A father takes his child for an outing and fulfills his wish. I am at home so I do the chores at home. | Family 13, mother |
| Mother gives birth to a child, breast feeds him, brings him up, washes their clothes, makes food for them, makes him sleep on time, takes care of his neatness, meaning whatever the task is inside the home that’s a mother’s responsibility. | Family 17, father |
| Shared roles | |
| Teaching | |
| I sit and show him books to make him smart. I teach him from the books. I teach him words. I tell him the names of different things. I tell him that this is this color. This is a cat and this is the sound it makes. I explain to him like that. I also take him out to meet my friends so he remembers their names. My wife teaches him when I am not at home. My wife feeds him and after feeding him sits with him and plays and repeats what I have taught. She shows my books and teaches him from that. She shows him a cow and different animal and then makes him remember words and the names of animals. | Family 18, father |
| I talk to her as much as possible. Everyone likes a child who speaks, and my husband talks to her too. We always talk to her so that she becomes intelligent and learns to speak from childhood. He talks to her so that she becomes intelligent and her mind expands the child becomes smart with age | Family 23, mother |
| Health care seeking | |
| Mother and father have the task that first they take care of the health. The mother will tell the father what is wrong, and then they will both take him to the doctor. | Family 32, father |
| Whenever the child is sick, no one other than the father can take care of it. If the child gets sick he would take him to the doctor and would make his wife understand how to provide the child with medicinal dosage. | FGD, mothers |
| If the child gets sick then mother and father take him to the doctor and get medicine for her. Mother and father together take care of the child because God has assigned these responsibilities to mother and father. | Family 26, father |
Fig. 2Factors that influence and explain differences in gendered parenting roles
Select illustrative quotes supporting the various factors that influence and explain paternal and maternal parenting roles
| Levels and sub-themes with supporting quotes | Respondent | |
|---|---|---|
| Individual factors | ||
| Child age | If the child is very young then in that case mother can go along with the father for doctor’s checkup. But if the child is grown up and can sit on the bike, then father can take the child with him by themselves. If the child is younger or if the child is very sick, then in that case mother can go along with his husband and child. | FGD, mothers |
| Paternal residential status | I sometimes feel his absence when my husband is not here. I have to take them to the doctor and there is issue of car. Then it is difficult for me. There is money but I feel his absence that it is difficult to take to the doctors. | Family 27, mother |
| Paternal residential status | I am a laborer and work and live in Karachi and come after 3 months. Then whatever number of days I spend here [back in Naushehro Feroze] I try to keep my children happy and I play with them… His mother is more responsible for that [feeding the child] because I come home after two or three months… I have the role that I earn for him, fulfill his needs, the rest I do if I am at home. But right now I am not at home so his mother cares for everything... my wife is the one who plays with him and spend time together with him. | Family 15, father |
| Paternal employment | I am very attached to my children. My husband isn’t attached that much because he is busy. He has a job and spends most of his day busy at work. He comes back home at 7. If a man spends his whole day working and comes back in the evening, what time will he be able to give to his children? You can imagine, so taking care of them is all my responsibility. I personally feel that my children are closer to me because my husband is out most of the time. | Family 20, mother |
| Paternal education | Actually my wife is illiterate and I am educated. So I teach him accordingly. I want that my son becomes [educated] like the way I am. I teach him words and their pronunciation. I show him pictures in books. | Family 18, father |
| Maternal education | First I don’t have an education like today’s girls who do and have jobs, and I don’t have a skill. I just do house chores. I don’t know stitching or embroidery. We were poor so we don’t have an education and neither did we learn anything. If my husband is not there and doesn’t do labor or hard work, so I will need everything. | Family 24, mother |
| Maternal education | I say to my husband that I am illiterate you teach him how to write and read. He [the child’s father] knows everything and makes him remember and he makes children learn and writes for the child. | Family 29, mother |
| Extended family | ||
| Siblings | His older brother plays with him, and they both play together 24/7. They play hide and seek or they play with toys like cars and motorcycles. And then when their father comes he also plays with them. They don’t look like father and sons, but all look like brothers. | Family 33, mother |
| Uncles | Yes his paternal uncle has a hand. If I am not free, then he takes him out for outing. He says, “He is crying so I am taking him out”. | Family 7, father |
| Uncles | He [child’s father] asks on the phone [about taking child to doctor], but most of the time I go with my brother in law because my husband is away for work most of the time. | Family 5, mother |
| Community | ||
| Neighborhood | I take him to the national highway. There’s a petrol pump and he sees cars so he gets happy. Sometimes I take him to Naushero Feroze to the flour mill. He looks at the machine and how it’s working. | Family 29, father |
| Neighborhood | There are no children’s parks [playgrounds] near our home. There’s only one near the national highway. He takes her [child] there, but only when he has a day off from work. | Family 19, mother |
| Social, economic, cultural factors | ||
| Poverty | I want to buy nice toys for him, but I am unable to because of poverty, because of not enough money. The money I get from labor is used in the house and then are all finished. So no money for children’s small necessities. | Family 28, father |
| Poverty | Our difficulty is that I do not have money. If I had money, children will also be happy and so will we. | Family 4, father |
| Gender norms | I am a woman and a woman will only be able to see the inside environment. The husband sees the outside. But if he is not there, then the wife will not be able to raise the children on her own and purchase needs from outside. | Family 19, mother |