Are Hispanic moms making the right decision by staying home?
Hispanic women are more likely to be stay-at-home moms, and new research indicates this parenting trend is steadily increasing. According to data from the Pew…
Hispanic women are more likely to be stay-at-home moms, and new research indicates this parenting trend is steadily increasing.
According to data from the Pew Research Center, the number of mothers who now stay at home has rise from 23 percent in 1999 to 29 percent in 2012, with Hispanics, Asians and immigrant mothers most likely to remain in the home regardless of financial needs.
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A report on the new study from CNBC indicates the moms who are staying home are younger, less educated, more likely to just have a high school diploma, and are more likely to be in poverty. In fact almost a third of these moms are in poverty, staying home not because they want to but often because their workplace did not offer them reasonable childcare options.
Many of these women are home because they simply can’t find employment, and others stay at home for a combination of employment and cultural expectations. Hispanics, for example, tend to place significant importance on the role of family and are less likely to be comfortable leaving a child in a daycare setting with people who are viewed as strangers.
But Hispanic mothers may be doing something right by staying home with their babies, and two major studies support the idea of a stay-at-home parent during a child’s pre-adolescent years.
The potential health benefits of being a stay-at-home mom
Two groundbreaking studies, one conducted by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the other by the Institute of Child Development of the University of Minnesota support the idea of having a stay-at-home mom–or stay-at-home parent in general.
Both of those studies found that children who spent the majority of their day in a daycare setting experienced higher levels of stress and aggression compared to children who stayed in their own homes, and follow-up research into the area during 2010 also confirmed the findings, but expanded on them, indicating the negative effects of absentee parents carried on well into the adolescent years.