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Journal of Family Issues, Vol. 26, No. 1, 3-31 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0192513X03259146

Marital Disruption and Accidents/Injuries Among Children

Darcy W. Hango

London School of Economics and Political Science, d.hango{at}lse.ac.uk

Sharon K. Houseknecht

The Ohio State University

A vast literature has examined the effects of marital disruption on child well-being, however medically attended childhood accidents/injuries have not been considered as an outcome. This article investigates this association as well as possible intervening pathways using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-linked mother-child file. Findings reveal that marital disruption decreases girls’ accidents/injuries. Boys are not directly affected. Parenting practices, childhood aggression, and precipitous drops in household income appear to do little to the relationship between marital disruption and childhood accidents/injuries for boys. For girls, however, the potential benefits of a marital disruption are suppressed until considering mother’s use of discipline and household income decline. Results are discussed in terms of stress theory and the effect of mother-daughter versus mother-son dynamics following marital disruption.

Key Words: marital disruption • divorce/separation • accidents/injuries • parenting • aggression • economic decline


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S. K. Houseknecht and D. W. Hango
The Impact of Marital Conflict and Disruption on Children's Health
Youth Society, September 1, 2006; 38(1): 58 - 89.
[Abstract] [PDF]