Title: The Rev. Dr. Paul Sullins
1Child Emotional Problems in Same-Sex Parent
FamiliesThe Discovery of Irreducible Difference
- The Rev. Dr. Paul Sullins
- The Catholic University of America
- Marriage and Religion Research Institute (MARRI)
2American Sociological Association Amicus Brief
(2/23/13), Hollingsworth v. Perry, p. 3
- The claim that same-sex parents produce less
positive child outcomes than opposite-sex
parentseither because such families lack both a
male and female parent or because both parents
are not the biological parents of their
childrencontradicts abundant social science
research. - Whether a child is raised by same-sex or
- opposite-sex parents has no bearing on a childs
- wellbeing.
3Child Well-Being in Same-Sex Parent Families
Review of Research Prepared for American
Sociological Association Amicus Brief Wendy D.
Manning Marshal Neal FettroEsther Lamidi Popul
Res Policy Rev (2014) 33485502, Abstract
- We conclude that there is a clear consensus in
the social science literature indicating that
American children living within same-sex parent
households fare just as well as those children
residing within different-sex parent households
over a wide array of well-being measures
academic performance, cognitive development,
social development, psychological health, early
sexual activity, and substance abuse. - Our assessment of the literature is based on
credible and methodologically sound studies that
compare well-being outcomes of children residing
within same-sex and different-sex parent
families. - Differences that exist in child well-being are
largely due to socioeconomic circumstances and
family stability.
4Sound methodology?
Our assessment of the literature is based on
credible and methodologically sound studies that
compare well-being outcomes of children residing
within same-sex and different-sex parent
families.
In a recent review of 49 same-sex parenting
studies prior to 2010, 47 of which concluded that
there were no differences in child well-being
compared to opposite-sex families, Allen found
that not a single study involved a representative
sample large enough to distinguish differences if
they existed. The mean sample size of children
with same-sex parents was only 39 (Rosenfeld
2013757), virtually guaranteeing Type II error
(failing to detect a true effect) regarding
population differences. Only four studies used a
probability (random) sample at all the largest
of these included only 44 female same-sex
families. The remainder based their findings
on conveniently available or selected groups of
participants, often recruited from biased,
politically aware sources such as LGBT events,
bookstore and newspaper advertisements, word of
mouth, networking and youth groups (Allen
2013640 see this article or Marks 2012 for
comprehensive lists of study sample sizes and
sources.).
5Good data are hard to find
Drawing a probability sample of sufficient size
to discern population differences with any
statistical power, however, presents substantial
difficulties for what Rosenfeld (2013963) has
colorfully termed the needle-in-a-haystack
population of same-sex parents. According to the
U.S. Census, same-sex couple households comprise
less than 0.005 (five one-thousandths, or
one-half of one percent) of U.S. households with
children.i To attain a sample of 800 same-sex
couples, which has been estimated to be the
minimum sample size needed to make inferences for
this population, would require drawing at least
160,000 cases, assuming a perfect response rate.
Same-sex couples, moreover, tend to have somewhat
lower than normal response rates, perhaps due to
stigma, and female couples are more likely to be
raising children than males, resulting in an
extremely low yield for same-sex parents, and
particularly gay male parents, in randomized
population samples.
6Enter NHIS 1.6 million cases yielding 512 SS
parent families
- The National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) is
the principle source of public health information
about the United States population. Since 1957
the United States Centers for Disease Control and
Preventions National Center for Health
Statistics has annually interviewed between
35,000 and 40,000 households, collecting data on
75,000 to 100,000 individuals comprising a
nationally representative sample of the civilian
noninstitutionalized population of the United
States.
The present study examines combined 1997-2013
NHIS data, consisting of information on 1,598,006
persons, including 207,007 sample children. This
sample included 2,751 same sex couples2,304
cohabiting and 447 spousalconsisting of 1,387
male couples and 1,384 female couples 582
couples406 female and 176 malehad children
under age 18 in the home. A more extensive
battery of health questions, including the
measures of emotional health used in this study,
was completed for 512 children sampled, one per
family, from the same-sex parenting families.
7Primary measure Strengths and Difficulties
Questionnaire (SDQ)
- The 0-10 scale used on NHIS (SDQ-EX) was
calibrated against a sample with known clinical
diagnoses by a team from the Harvard University
School of Public Health, who discovered that a
high score (6 or more) screened for 12-month
clinical diagnoses, as determined by a more
extensive clinical assessment, with a positive
predictive value of 74, negative predictive
value of 98, and overall concordance (AUC) of
.80. (Kessler, Gruber, and Sampson 200655, Table
28)
8RESULTS
9What does not explain it
- OS/SS Differences in child emotional problems are
unaffected by - parent education and income
- family stability
- age, race and sex of child
- peer stigmatization or bullying
- parent emotional problems
- Most of these affect the overall risk of child
emotional problems, but do not cause more
problems in SS families than they do in OS
families.
10What does explain it
- One powerful factor explains Biological
Parentage - Distinguishes children being raised by
- 1. Both biological parents, or
- 2. Only one of his/her biological parents (step
or single parent family), or - 3. Neither biological parent (i.e., adopted
children) - Including biological parentage in the statistical
models explains all the OS/SS variation and
renders all other causal factors insignificant. - Bio Parentage is both necessary and sufficient
to account for the higher rate of emotional
problems observed among children with same-sex
parents.
11Children living with both bio parents have far
fewer emotional problems
but there are no such children in same-sex
families.
(They make up almost two-thirds of children in
opposite-sex families)
12Marriage or family structure alone has a mixed
and weak effect, which does not clearly
differentiate same-sex and opposite-sex families.
The apparent effect of family structure is
really due to the fact that
13Bio effects correlate strongly with marriage
Almost all children with parents in an intact
first marriage live with both bio parents
14This finding is well recognized--for opposite-sex
families
- First, research clearly demonstrates that family
- structure matters for children, and the family
structure - that helps children the most is a family headed
- by two biological parents in a low-conflict
marriage. - Children in single-parent families, children born
to - unmarried mothers, and children in stepfamilies
or - cohabiting relationships face higher risks of
poor - outcomes than do children in intact families
headed - by two biological parents.
- Kristin Anderson Moore, Susan M. Jekielek, and
Carol Emig, "Marriage from a Childs Perspective
How Does Family Structure Affect Children, and
What Can We Do about It?", Child Trends Research
Brief, June 2002 (Emphasis added)
15This is not new or surprising--for opposite-sex
families
- Children who grow up in a household with only
one biological parent are worse off, on average,
than children who grow up in a household with
both of their biological parents regardless of
the parents race, education and marital status,
including remarriage. -
- McLanahan, Sara, and Gary D. Sandefur. 1994.
Growing up with a Single Parent What Hurts, What
Helps. Harvard University Press. Page 1.
16ThreeImplications
The higher risk of emotional problems for
children in same-sex parent families has little
or nothing to do with the quality of parenting,
care, or other relational characteristics of
those families.
1
- But if the strongest benefits for child
well-being are conferred only on the biological
offspring of both parents - and since same-sex relationships cannot, at least
at present, conceive a child that is the
biological offspring of both partners, in the way
that every child conceived by opposite-sex
partners is such - then same-sex partners, no matter how loving and
committed, can never replicate the level of
benevolence for child well-being that is possible
for opposite-sex partners.
2
This defect, moreover, is an essential and
permanent feature of same-sex relationships it
is part of their definition, an irreducible
difference that cannot be amended or abrogated by
improving the circumstances, stability, legal
status or social acceptance of same-sex couples.
3
17Conclusion What is marriage?
The primary benefit of marriage for children may
not be that it tends to present them with
improved parents (more stable, financially
affluent, etc., although it does do this), but
that it presents them with their own parents.
This is the case for 98 of children in nuclear
familieswhich most successfully fulfill the
formal civil premise of marriage, that is,
lifelong and exclusive partner commitmentcompared
to less than half of children in any other
family category, and no children in same-sex
families. Whether or not same-sex families
attain the legal right, as opposite-sex couples
now have, to solemnize their relationship in
civil marriage, the two family forms will
continue to have fundamentally different, even
contrasting, effects on the biological component
of child well-being, to the relative detriment of
children in same-sex families. Functionally,
opposite-sex marriage is a social practice that,
as much as possible, ensures to children the
joint care of both biological parents, with the
attendant benefits that brings same-sex marriage
ensures the opposite.