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Where is the F in MCH? Father involvement in African American families.

TLDR
A multi-level, life-course approach is needed to strengthen the capacity of African American men to promote greater involvement in pregnancy and parenting as they become fathers.
Abstract
Objectives To: 1) review the historical contexts and current profiles of father involvement in African American families; 2) identify barriers to, and supports of, involvement; 3) evaluate the effectiveness of father involvement programs; and 4) recommend directions for future research, programs, and public policies. Methods Review of observational and interventional studies on father involvement. Results Several historical developments (slavery, declining employment for Black men and increasing workforce participation for Black women, and welfare policies that favored single mothers) led to father absence from African American families. Today, more than two thirds of Black infants are born to unmarried mothers. Even if unmarried fathers are actively involved initially, their involvement over time declines. We identified multiple barriers to, and supports of, father involvement at multiple levels. These levels include intrapersonal (eg, human capital, attitudes and beliefs about parenting), interpersonal (eg, the father's relationships with the mother and maternal grandmother), neighborhoods and communities (eg, high unemployment and incarceration rates), cultural or societal (eg, popular cultural perceptions of Black fathers as expendable and irresponsible, racial stratification and institutionalized racism), policy (eg, Earned Income Tax Credit, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, child support enforcement), and life-course factors (eg, father involvement by the father's father). We found strong evidence of success for several intervention programs (eg, Reducing the Risk, Teen Outreach Program, and Children's Aid Society - Carrera Program) designed to prevent formation of father-absent families, but less is known about the effectiveness of programs to encourage greater father involvement because of a lack of rigorous research design and evaluation for most programs. Conclusion A multi-level, life-course approach is needed to strengthen the capacity of African American men to promote greater involvement in pregnancy and parenting as they become fathers.

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Fathers' engagement in pregnancy and childbirth: evidence from a national survey.

TL;DR: Paternal engagement was highest in partners of primiparous white women, those living in less deprived areas, and in those whose pregnancy was planned, and greater paternal engagement was positively associated with first contact with health professionals before 12 weeks gestation.
References
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Book

The ecology of human development : experiments by nature and design

TL;DR: An apparatus for measuring at least two of the following characteristics of a fluid; pH, partial pressure of dissolved gas or gases therein, inorganic ion concentration, hemoglobin, temperature, and the like, the apparatus comprising a vessel having a flow channel for fluid passing therethrough and means for inducing turbulence in the channel at specified locations.
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Growing Up With a Single Parent: What Hurts, What Helps

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of parenting and the community connection in single-parenting is discussed and why we care about single-parenthood, and what should be done about it.
Book

The Role of the Father in Child Development

TL;DR: For a variety of sociopolitical, economic, scientific, and clinical reasons, considerable interest in the study of father-child relationships has emerged in the last decade as mentioned in this paper, and the focus has narrowed to concern about the effects of increased paternal involvement.
Journal ArticleDOI

All our kin : strategies for survival in a Black community

TL;DR: The Flats as discussed by the authors is a collection of urban poor stereotypes and stereotypes versus reality, including: "What Goes Round Come Round" and "Gimme a Little Sugar" from the '60s.
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