PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Parents are happier people

Psychologists from UC Riverside, Stanford and the University of British Columbia find that parents experience greater happiness and meaning in life than nonparents

2012-05-18
(Press-News.org) RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Contrary to recent scholarship and popular belief, parents experience greater levels of happiness and meaning in life than people without children, according to researchers from the University of California, Riverside, the University of British Columbia and Stanford University. Parents also are happier during the day when they are caring for their children than during their other daily activities, the researchers found in a series of studies conducted in the United States and Canada.

These findings appear in a paper — "In Defense of Parenthood: Children Are Associated With More Joy Than Misery" — which will be published in a forthcoming issue of Psychological Science, the flagship journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

"We are not saying that parenting makes people happy, but that parenthood is associated with happiness and meaning," explained Sonja Lyubomirsky, professor of psychology at UC Riverside and a leading scholar in positive psychology. "Contrary to repeated scholarly and media pronouncements, people may find solace that parenthood and child care may actually be linked to feelings of happiness and meaning in life."

Paper co-authors are S. Katherine Nelson, a doctoral candidate at UCR; Kostadin Kushlev, a doctoral candidate at UBC; Tammy English, a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford; and Elizabeth W. Dunn, associate professor of psychology at UBC.

The findings are among a new wave of research that suggests that parenthood comes with relatively more positives, despite the added responsibilities. The study also dovetails with emerging evolutionary perspectives that suggest parenting is a fundamental human need.

Recent popular accounts have painted a portrait of unhappy parents who find little joy in taking care of their children, "but the scientific basis for these claims remains inconclusive," the researchers wrote.

"If you went to a large dinner party, the parents in the room would be just as happy or happier than the guests without children," Dunn said.

The researchers conducted three studies that tested whether parents are happier overall than their childless peers, if parents feel better moment-to-moment than nonparents, and whether parents experience more positive feelings when taking care of children than during their other daily activities.

The consistency of their findings across all three studies "provides strong evidence challenging the widely held perception that children are associated with reduced well-being.

Among the findings:

Parents are happier when taking care of their children than while doing other daily activities.

Fathers in particular expressed greater levels of happiness, positive emotion and meaning in life than their childless peers. This finding requires further study, Dunn noted, adding that "the pleasures of parenthood may be offset by the surge in responsibility and housework that arrives with motherhood."

Older and married parents tend to be the happiest. "Our findings suggest that if you are older (and presumably more mature) and if you are married (and presumably have more social and financial support), then you're likely to be happier if you have children than your childless peers," Lyubomirsky said. "This is not true, however, for single parents or very young parents."

As Dunn put it, "These findings suggest that parents are not nearly the miserable creatures that we might expect from recent studies and popular representations."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Bluetooth baby

2012-05-18
Checking the heart of the unborn baby usually involves a stethoscope. However, an inexpensive and accurate Bluetooth fetal heart rate monitoring system has now been developed by researchers in India for long-term home care. Details are reported in a forthcoming issue of the International Journal of Computers in Healthcare. Vijay Chourasia of the LNM Institute of Information Technology in Jaipur and Anil Kumar Tiwari of the Indian Institute of Technology Rajasthan, in Jodhpur, explain how fetal phonocardiography is the modern equivalent of the stethoscope in ante-natal ...

New York Institutes Reforms to Improve Bus and Bicycle Safety

2012-05-18
Two new safety reforms should help keep New Yorkers safe on the Empire State's roads and highways. Cuomo Funds New Bus Safety Inspection Program New York Governor Andrew Cuomo promised $1 million to fund a new bus safety inspection system targeting the worst-performing companies. Cuomo's decision came on the heels of a tumultuous year for New York fatal bus accidents. One accident last March resulted in the deaths of 15 people. The accident involved a bus which routinely shuttled gamblers from New York City to a popular Connecticut casino. Another accident last ...

Zebrafish could hold the key to understanding psychiatric disorders

2012-05-18
Scientists at Queen Mary, University of London have shown that zebrafish could be used to study the underlying causes of psychiatric disorders. The study, published online in the journal Behavioural Brain Research, found zebrafish can modify their behaviour in response to varying situations. Dr Caroline Brennan, from Queen Mary's School of Biological and Chemical Sciences who led the study, said: "Zebrafish are becoming one of the most useful animal models for studying the developmental genetic mechanisms underlying many psychiatric disorders; they breed prolifically ...

Specialized care by experienced teams cuts death and disability from bleeding brain aneurysms

2012-05-18
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — People with bleeding brain aneurysms have the best chance of survival and full recovery if they receive aggressive emergency treatment from a specialized team at a hospital that treats a large number of patients like them every year, according to new guidelines just published by the American Stroke Association. Diagnosing and immediately treating this kind of "bleeding stroke", and using advanced techniques to prevent re-bleeding and aneurysm recurrence, reduces the chance of immediate death and disability by 30 percent for patients with aneurysm-related ...

Physician Privacy Versus Patient Informed Consent

2012-05-18
The Debate Continues The need for surgery can make anyone feel vulnerable. Most people find solace in the fact that they will be treated by surgeons with many years of training. Even so, the rate of medical mistakes that result in injury or death is shocking: a 1999 study by The Institute of Medicine reported that medical errors were responsible for almost 100,000 deaths and more than one million injuries every year in the United States. Those rates have steadily increased in the past 13 years since that study was performed. In fact, The New England Journal of Medicine ...

Common genetic variants identify autism risk in high risk siblings of children with ASD

2012-05-18
Toronto, CANADA (May 17, 2012)— By focusing on the identification of common genetic variants, researchers have identified 57 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that predict—with a high degree of certainty--the risk that siblings of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) will also develop the condition. The findings were presented at the International Meeting for Autism Research. ASD is among the most common form of severe developmental disability with prevalence rates up to 1 in 88 children. Boys are greater than four times more likely to be diagnosed with ...

Fighting bacteria's strength in numbers

Fighting bacterias strength in numbers
2012-05-18
Scientists at The University of Nottingham have opened the way for more accurate research into new ways to fight dangerous bacterial infections by proving a long-held theory about how bacteria communicate with each other. Researchers in the University's School of Molecular Medical Sciences have shown for the first time that the effectiveness of the bacteria's communication method, a process called 'quorum sensing', directly depends on the density of the bacterial population. This work will help inform wider research into how to stop bacteria talking to each other with ...

Fatal Dog Attack Kills Four-Year-Old Texas Boy

2012-05-18
A recent pit bull attack led to the tragic death of an East Texas boy and many questions about dog bite liability. The four-year-old had wandered away from home around sunset and was found dead late the next morning by a neighbor after an all-night search by family members and more than 100 volunteers and law enforcement officers. The boy had apparently entered the neighbor's yard about a half mile from home, where several dogs were restrained. A Victoria County Sheriff's Deputy told reporters that one of the dogs, a pit bull or pit mix, had mauled the boy. Media attention ...

Commercial Truck Fleets Developing Distracted Driving Policies

2012-05-18
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) issued new regulations that ban commercial motor vehicle drivers from using handheld cell phones. The regulations became effective on January 1, 2012. These regulations have forced many trucking companies to revise their communication policies with their drivers. Cell phones provide a quick and convenient method for companies and their dispatchers to remain in contact with their driver and shipments. If a crash occurs when a driver is talking or texting on a cell phone there is a strong inference that the phone ...

New study shows simple task at 6 months of age may predict risk of autism

2012-05-18
VIDEO: New research from Kennedy Krieger finds that a simple pull-to-sit task at six months of age may predict risk of an autism spectrum disorder. Researchers at Kennedy Krieger identified weak... Click here for more information. BALTIMORE, Md. – A new prospective study of six-month-old infants at high genetic risk for autism identified weak head and neck control as a red flag for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and language and/or social developmental delays. Researchers at the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Light-activated ink developed to remotely control cardiac tissue to repair the heart

EMBARGOED: Dana-Farber investigators pinpoint keys to cell therapy response for leukemia

Surgeon preference factors into survival outcomes analyses for multi- and single-arterial bypass grafting

Study points to South America – not Mexico – as birthplace of Irish potato famine pathogen

VR subway experiment highlights role of sound in disrupting balance for people with inner ear disorder

Evolution without sex: How mites have survived for millions of years

U. of I. team develops weight loss app that tracks fiber, protein content in meals

Progress and challenges in brain implants

City-level sugar-sweetened beverage taxes and changes in adult BMI

Duration in immigration detention and health harms

COVID-19 pandemic and racial and ethnic disparities in long-term nursing home stay or death following hospital discharge

Specific types of liver immune cells are required to deal with injury

How human activity has shaped Brazil Nut forests’ past and future

Doctors test a new way to help people quit fentanyl 

Long read sequencing reveals more genetic information while cutting time and cost of rare disease diagnoses

AAAS and ASU launch mission-driven collaborative to strengthen scientific enterprise

Medicaid-insured heart transplant patients face higher risk of post-transplant complications

Revolutionizing ammonia synthesis: New iron-based catalyst surpasses century-old benchmark

A groundbreaking approach: Researchers at The University of Texas at San Antonio chart the future of neuromorphic computing

Long COVID, Italian scientists discovered the molecular ‘fingerprint’ of the condition in children's blood

Battery-powered electric vehicles now match petrol and diesel counterparts for longevity

MIT method enables protein labeling of tens of millions of densely packed cells in organ-scale tissues

Calculating error-free more easily with two codes

Dissolving clusters of cancer cells to prevent metastases

A therapeutic HPV vaccine could eliminate precancerous cervical lesions

Myth busted: Healthy habits take longer than 21 days to set in

Development of next-generation one-component epoxy with high-temperature stability and flame retardancy

Scaling up neuromorphic computing for more efficient and effective AI everywhere and anytime

Make it worth Weyl: engineering the first semimetallic Weyl quantum crystal

Exercise improves brain function, possibly reducing dementia risk

[Press-News.org] Parents are happier people
Psychologists from UC Riverside, Stanford and the University of British Columbia find that parents experience greater happiness and meaning in life than nonparents