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First published on May 8, 2008
Journal of Family Issues 2008, doi:10.1177/0192513X08317045
© 2008 SAGE Publications

Article

When Child Care Breaks Down: Mothers' Experiences With Child Care Problems and Resulting Missed Work

Margaret L. Usdansky* and Douglas A. Wolf

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mlusdans{at}maxwell.syr.edu.


   Abstract
Qualitative research suggests that day-to-day problems with child care produce significant costs for low-income mothers. But the relevance of daily child care problems for mothers of all socioeconomic backgrounds has been largely overlooked. This article asks two interrelated questions: What factors shape how often mothers experience child care disruptions? and What factors shape how often care disruptions lead mothers to miss work? Using the Fragile Families and Child Well-Being Study (N = 1,309), which includes mothers across the socioeconomic spectrum, this research finds that low-income mothers, mothers whose shifts vary, mothers who rely on patchwork care, and mothers with low social support are likely to experience care disruptions. But only mothers with low social support and mothers who use certain types of child care face an elevated risk of missing work. The findings underscore the widespread nature of child care problems and their heightened impact on socially isolated mothers.


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