The effect of paternal and alloparental support on the interbirth-interval among contemporary North American families

Publication date

2017-07-01

Authors

Szabó, N.ISNI 0000000396859524
Dubas, JudithISNI 0000000392382431
Volling, Brenda
van Aken, MarcelISNI 0000000114926849

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

The present study investigated whether the length of interbirth intervals between first and second-born children in a North-American middle-class sample could be explained by paternal and alloparental support and firstborn children’s gender. The sample consisted of 225 families in which mothers were expecting their second child. Parents reported on paternal and alloparental support (maternal kin, paternal kin, and non-kin support). The results showed that higher maternal kin support and having a firstborn son was linked with shorter interbirth-intervals. Mothers’ longer work hours during the pregnancy with the second born was related to longer interbirth intervals. These results highlight the importance of maternal kin support and children’s characteristics in understanding the timing of birth when parents have a second child.

Keywords

alloparental support, paternal investment, interbirth interval, Taverne

Citation

Szabó, N, Dubas, J J S, Volling, B & van Aken, M A G 2017, 'The effect of paternal and alloparental support on the interbirth-interval among contemporary North American families', Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 272-280. https://doi.org/10.1037/ebs0000093