Maryland Remains a Top School for Entrepreneurially-Minded Students

New NIH Grant to Advance Joint UMD & UMB Brain Surgery Robot Development

TerpVision7 Offers Compelling Stories About the University of Maryland

New UMD Poll Shows Israelis Doubt Benefit from Gaza Conflict

Maryland in News

In This Week's News
November 2012

Maryland moving to Big Ten (Washington Post)

Move to Big Ten a defining one for President Wallace Loh (Baltimore Sun)


UMD, UMB venture to focus on patient data research (Baltimore Business Journal)





Social Issues

E-mail this article For Immediate Release
December 15, 2008
Contacts: Neil Tickner, 301 405 4622 or ntickner@umd.edu

Unmarried Dads: Pre-natal Involvement, Not Marriage, Ties Knot

a pciture of cream launch

For unmarried families, critical family bonding begins before birth.
Click to enlarge.

COLLEGE PARK, Maryland - The best chance of "reeling-in" an unmarried father and building the foundations for a stable family life are the critical months of pregnancy, says new research from the University of Maryland. Marriage itself is no guarantee, the study adds.

"Unmarried dads are less likely to drift away if they are involved during this vital period when a family can begin to bond," says University of Maryland human development professor Natasha Cabrera, the principal investigator and a researcher at the school's Maryland Population Research Center.

The study, published in the December Journal of Marriage and Family, is the first to examine the importance of the pre-natal period in the formation of non-traditional family patterns.

The researchers analyzed data drawn from an ongoing project - the Fragile Families Child Well Being Study - of mostly unmarried couples, a total of 1,686 couples in all.

In their analysis, Cabrera and her colleague, Jay Fagan at Temple University, found that fathers involved during pregnancy were significantly more likely to remain involved in raising their child at age three.

a pciture of cream launch
Natasha Cabrera

"The unmarried father is much more likely either to maintain or move into a more committed relationship if he's involved before the birth, and that's the critical difference," Cabrera says. "As you might expect, research has consistently shown that creating a stable home life predicts whether a father will be an active participant in raising the child, but what we've learned here is that the pre-natal months are when that kind of family structure is most likely to coalesce."

The study found that marital status is not a critical predictor of a father's involvement. "It is the decision that couples make to strengthen commitment and move in together that is important, rather than marital status per se," Cabrera said. "You don't need much imagination to see that a live-in dad is likely to be more involved in child care and family life. It's the personal investment in the child's and the mother's future that counts the most, not the paperwork."

COPIES OF THE STUDY AVAILABLE

Media representatives only may receive a pdf-version of the complete study by emailing ntickner@umd.edu

MARYLAND POPULATION RESEARCH CENTER

The Maryland Population Research Center brings together population researchers from a broad range of disciplines, including economics, sociology, criminology, family science, and public policy. The Center is funded by the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences at the University of Maryland and by an infrastructure grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. http://www.popcenter.umd.edu/

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Natasha Cabrera
Principal Researcher
301-405-2801 (office)
202-210-8094 (cell)
ncabrera@umd.edu

Neil Tickner
Senior Media Relations Associate, University of Maryland
301-405-4622
301-257-0073 (after-hours)
ntickner@umd.edu


Other UM Family Research

Family Studies Offers Couples Abuse Prevention
Low Income Men face Challenges as Dads
Maryland's Experts Put Fathers Under The Microscope on Father's Day
Are All Dads Equal?


08218View Printer Friendly Version


dotsInformation provided by the Office of University Communications
Email University Communications at emailum@umd.edu