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STAY CLOSE BY, FOR
THE SAKE OF THE KIDS
BE SMART-UNDERSTAND
THE LAW
By Karen S. Peterson, USA TODAY
posted 7/6/2003 8:33 pm
When parents divorce, their
children do best if both adults continue to live in the same
general vicinity, providing both mother and father with
proximity to the child, new research shows. That finding may
seem obvious. But it runs contrary to a developing trend in
courtrooms, says researchers at Arizona State University. If a
custodial parent wants to move, courts are generally approving
the relocation, believing that what that parent wants will also
be good for the child, the researchers say.
The study indicates that courts should “give greater weight to
the child’s separate interests” and less weight to a parent’s
desire to make a move.
“Kids do better with both of their parents to provide some kind
of loving environment for them,” says study co-author and
psychologist Sanford Braver. And that means both parents need to
be available to the child, even after a divorce.
The report in the Journal of Family Psychology, published by the
American Psychological Association, states: “In the great
majority of these relocating families (82%), the move separated
the child from the father, because either the mother moved away
with the child or the father moved away alone.”
Young adults from divorced families in which one parent moved
did not score as well on 11 out of 14 measures of well-being as
those in which neither parent relocated, says researcher William
Fabricius. Those measures include general physical health, life
satisfaction and personal and emotional adjustment.
They also reported their parents had a worse relationship and
were not as available to them for emotional support, compared
with those young adults whose parents were not separated by a
move.
Fabricius, also a psychologist, is surprised by the study’s
results. “The fact that we found so many consistently poor
outcomes for those whose parents moved is cause for concern.”
Findings are similar, he says, whether a parent moved away with
the child or whether that parent stayed in place and the other
parent moved. It is not the move itself that matters: “it is the
separation from a parent” that matters, he says.
Braver is particularly concerned about the findings on the
physical health of the young adults studied. “There are
implications for the future,’ he says. “The effects may become
exaggerated over time.” Prior research indicates divorce can put
children at risk for later stress-related illnesses, the report
says.
The researchers surveyed 602 college students whose parents had
divorced, dividing the students into subgroups that included
various moving arrangements or no move at all.
The researchers emphasize their findings do not indicate a
cause-and-effect relationship between a move and a child at
risk.
Warren Farrell, San Diego-based author of Father and Child
Reunion, says the study findings are important. “When one parent
is distant, he or she becomes a cardboard figure” in the child’s
life, he says. “The child ends up destabilized.”
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