The study results revealed that mothers of children with autistic disorder reported significantly higher levels of depression than mothers of children without autism and experienced distress more
than fathers of children with developmental disabilities.
Though the center is for all parents, it's more often mothers
rather than fathers who come with their children.
Those laws are crucial because mothers stay home to care for a sick child more often
than fathers do.
With increasing age, however, older children report expressing negative emotions more often to their
mothers than their fathers, expecting dads to respond negatively to an emotional display.
Mothers, according to many authors, receive primary parenting responsibilities and physical custody of the children far more
often than fathers.
Mothers of children with ASD scored
higher than fathers, while no gender differences were found among parents of typically developing children.
Mothers also feel a higher level of happiness
than fathers when taking care of children.
While it's true that a good man is hard to find, most of us need look no
further than father for a superior example of the male species.
Was the question this: is it better for children to have a mother at home rather
than a father at home, generally speaking, not a hard and fast rule?
Fathers who have participated in baby - care courses take on more care of their
babies than fathers who have not.
This is not to say that mothers are more affected by family stressors including the partner's psychological
problems than fathers.
Lets look past the fact that god has more
power than a father to stop a son from hurting himself and intentionally chooses not to.
It is not that we are
wiser than our fathers, but that developments of recent times have revealed the true nature of the forces which play upon the life of man.
Under the old law, judges usually assumed that mothers are better at child
care than fathers.
Overall, women were more likely to support strategies to support pregnant
teens than fathers.
While mothers did not have more accurate knowledge compared to fathers, they did perceive themselves to be more
knowledgeable than fathers.
Mothers reported greater levels of stress and
coping than fathers, in addition to greater involvement with their child.
The court I began covering in 1978 was populated by men who were, for the most part,
older than my father.
Parents of children with ASD reported higher levels of stress than comparison groups, with mothers reporting higher
stress than fathers.