“The Financial Is the Main Issue, It’s Not Even the Child”: Exploring the Role of Finances in Men’s Concepts of Fatherhood and Fertility Intention

Author:

Hamm Megan1,Miller Elizabeth234,Jackson Foster Lovie5,Browne Mario6,Borrero Sonya147

Affiliation:

1. Center for Research on Healthcare, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

2. Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

3. Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

4. Center for Women’s Health Research and Innovation, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

5. University of Pittsburgh School of Social Work, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

6. University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

7. Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion, VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

Abstract

Despite demonstrable need, men’s utilization of sexual and reproductive health services remains low. This low utilization may particularly affect low-income men, given the disproportionate prevalence of unintended pregnancy in low-income populations. Bolstering men’s utilization of sexual and reproductive health services requires understanding the services that are most relevant to them. Semistructured interviews about fatherhood, fertility intention, and contraceptive use were conducted with 58 low-income Black and White men in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The interviews were analyzed using content analysis to determine common themes that were most relevant to the men interviewed. The primacy of financial stability emerged as a dominant theme in men’s perceptions of fatherhood readiness, successful fathering, and fertility intentions. However, men had children despite feeling financially unprepared, and their contraceptive use was not always congruent with their stated fertility intentions. Some men described financial services as a feature of family planning services that they would find useful. Because of the salience of financial stability in preparation for fatherhood, integrating financial counseling and job skills training into the context of sexual and reproductive health services could be a useful structural intervention to increase men’s use of family planning services and to provide them with the support they say they need as fathers.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science)

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