European gay fathers via surrogacy: Parenting, social support, anti‐gay microaggressions, and child behavior problems

Author:

D'Amore Salvatore1ORCID,Green Robert‐Jay2,Mouton Benedicte1,Carone Nicola3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychological Sciences and Education, DéFaSy (Centre de Recherche sur la Psychologie du Développement, de la Famille et des Systèmes Humains) Université Libre de Bruxelles Brussel Belgium

2. California School of Professional Psychology Alliant International University San Francisco California USA

3. Department of Brain and Behavioral Sciences University of Pavia Pavia Italy

Abstract

AbstractThe present study investigated child behavior problems, parenting styles, coparenting, and couple relationship satisfaction in 67 European gay father families via surrogacy and 67 European heterosexual parent families via unassisted conception, all with children aged 1.5–10 years (M = 3.57 years, SD = 2.09). The two family groups were matched for child age and gender. In the gay father group only, the associations between family anti‐gay microaggressions, family/friend support, and other main variables also were explored. Children of gay fathers had fewer externalizing and internalizing problems compared to children of heterosexual parents. Also, gay fathers reported more effective parenting styles, greater coparenting quality, and higher couple relationship satisfaction compared to heterosexual parents. Overall, child externalizing problems (i.e., aggression, rule‐breaking) and internalizing problems (i.e., anxiety, depression) were more strongly associated with being raised in a heterosexual parent family, more authoritarian parenting, and lower positive coparenting. Specific to the gay father sample, anti‐gay microaggressions experienced by family members were associated with more child internalizing problems, lower positive coparenting, and lower social support from family and friends. These results refute concerns about possible detrimental effects on child development of surrogacy conception or of being raised by gay fathers. The results further suggest that family therapists treating child behavior problems should focus mainly on improving the coparenting relationship, reducing authoritarian/punitive parenting styles, and (for gay father families specifically) coping with anti‐gay microaggressions and lack of social support outside the nuclear family.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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