Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
Life

Myth Busted! Kids Of Single Mothers Don't Suffer

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Jul, 2017 01:29 PM
    Raising a child as a single parent may be stressful, but a study has found that a financially stable single mother and her kids have a greater social support network with brothers, sisters, parents, friends of neighbours than nuclear families.
     
     
    Comparing the well-being of children growing up in single-mother-by-choice and heterosexual two-parent families, the researchers found no differences in terms of parent-child relationship or child development.
     
     
    Investigator Mathilde Brewaeys from VU University Medical Centre, Amsterdam said that the children in both family types are doing well in terms of their well-being.
     
     
    "Single-mothers-by-choice and their children benefit from a good social support network and this should be emphasised in the counselling of women who want to have and raise a child without a partner," Brewaeys added.
     
     
    Fertility treatment of single women is now available in most European countries and is an increasingly popular procedure for single women who wish to become pregnant without a partner (ie, single mothers by choice).(1,2)
     
     
    "The assumption that growing up in a family without a father is not good for the child is based mainly on research into children whose parents are divorced and who thus have experienced parental conflict," explained Ms Brewaeys.
     
     
    "A strong social network is of crucial importance," said Ms Brewaeys. "So I would recommend that all women considering single motherhood by choice make sure of a strong social network - brothers, sisters, parents, friends of neighbours. And to never be afraid to ask for help."
     
     
     
     
    However, it seems likely that any negative influence on child development depends more on a troubled parent-child relationship and not on the absence of a father, the researchers noted.
     
     
    Single-mothers-by-choice knowingly make the decision to raise their child alone, in contrast to unintended single mothers.
     
     
    They analysed 69 single-mothers-by-choice (who had knowingly chosen to raise their child alone) and 59 mothers from heterosexual two-parent families with a child between the ages of 1.5 and six years.
     
     
    The parent-child relationships, mothers' social support network and children's well-being were compared.
     
     
    Single-mothers-by-choice showed significantly higher scores on the social support they received, but also on wanting more social support.
     
     
    Most women in her study were financially stable, had received a higher education and had meaningful partner relationships in the past.
     
     
    The research would be presented at the 33rd Annual Meeting of ESHRE in Geneva

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Young Britons pay for their heightened carnal desires

    Young Britons pay for their heightened carnal desires
    Young, single British professionals with a taste for binge drinking and recreational drugs are willing to pay for sex and are fine with possessing multiple sexual partner...

    Young Britons pay for their heightened carnal desires

    'Lost' languages get ingrained in brain

    'Lost' languages get ingrained in brain
    Traces of the mother tongue that babies learn remain in the brain years later even if they totally stop using the language, as can happen in cases of international adoption...

    'Lost' languages get ingrained in brain

    'Social status more strongly inherited than height'

    Social status is consistently passed down among families over multiple generations - in fact, it is even more strongly inherited than height, the findings showed....

    'Social status more strongly inherited than height'

    Fame-hungry teenagers risk exploitation on social media

    Fame-hungry teenagers risk exploitation on social media
    Teenagers are going to extreme lengths to grab attention on various social media platforms by uploading provocative selfies and videos, says a new study, ....

    Fame-hungry teenagers risk exploitation on social media

    'Intense emotional arousal triggers Twitter addiction'

    'Intense emotional arousal triggers Twitter addiction'
    Using a method that analysed Twitter users' brain activity while they were tweeting, a team of researchers has found that strong emotional arousal is what ....

    'Intense emotional arousal triggers Twitter addiction'

    Early school hours raise motor crash risk in teenagers

    Early school hours raise motor crash risk in teenagers
    Teenage drivers who start school classes earlier in the morning are involved in significantly more motor vehicle accidents than their peers who have...

    Early school hours raise motor crash risk in teenagers