I don't want to leave my child: How mothers and fathers affect mother's breastfeeding duration and leave length

Author:

Van Egdom Drake1ORCID,Piszczek Matthew M.2,Wen Xueqi3,Zhang Jing4,Granillo‐Velasquez Kenneth E.5,Spitzmueller Christiane6

Affiliation:

1. ICF 1902 Reston Metro Plaza Reston Virginia USA

2. Mike Ilitch School of Business Wayne State University Detroit Michigan USA

3. Advanced Institute of Business, School of Economics and Management Tongji University Shanghai China

4. Management Department California State University San Bernardino California USA

5. Department of Psychology University of Houston Houston Texas USA

6. Office of the Provost University of California – Merced Merced California USA

Abstract

AbstractAfter the birth of a child, employed mothers must make return‐to‐work and breastfeeding decisions. Prior organizational research focuses on how the mother's work environment affects these decisions, yet they are made with personal and relationship considerations in mind. We use the work‐home resources model and identity theory to address two pressing questions. First, do mothers' identity and fathers' paternity leave provide resources for supporting breastfeeding and return to work? Second, can mothers' separation anxiety help explain the psychological mechanisms for this process? We expect more work‐centric mothers and those whose partners take longer leaves to have lower maternal separation anxiety, and thereby shorter maternity leave length and shorter breastfeeding duration. We leverage the National Institute of Child Health and Development's Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development. We conducted analyses using data from 491 families and nine time points from childbirth to 3 years post birth. Consistent with the work‐home resources model, the father's leave length is negatively related to mother's separation anxiety, which is positively related to her leave length. We also found that the father's leave length is directly and positively related to mother's leave length and breastfeeding duration, and the mother's work centrality is negatively related to her leave length. We explain how these results fit into the work‐home resources model and suggest organizations should provide mothers with control over return‐to‐work decisions and encourage longer paternity leave.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Applied Psychology

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