Women dominate care for disabled.

PositionChildren - Brief article

Children with disabilities are more likely than other youngsters to live with single mothers or other female caretakers, suggests a study by Philip Cohen, associate professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

He found that 45.8% of these kids live with a married biological parent, compared to 62.3% of those without disabilities. About one in four youngsters with disabilities are cared for by single mothers, compared to 17.4% of other youngsters, in addition, children with disabilities are more than five times as likely to live with single mothers as with single fathers. About 13.5% of these individuals are raised by other caretakers (grandparents, various relatives, foster or adoptive parents), compared with seven percent of typical children. The study shows that these caretakers are significantly more likely to be women than men.

"The work-family balance issues that so many people are burdened with are especially...

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