Abstract
By reviewing the literature, we looked at how parental leave policies in Sweden have influenced two well-defined areas of
early father involvement: participating in parental leave and at visits/activities at the Child Health Centers. Sweden has
one of the most comprehensive and egalitarian parental leave policies in the world, permitting parents to take 480 days off
of work, receive 80% of their pay for the first 15 months, and divide their leave however they see fit, barring that both
parents receive 2 months of parental leave that is exclusive to them. Additionally, fathers are permitted to take the first
ten working days off to be at home with his family. Most parents, especially mothers, use parental leave throughout their
infant’s first year. During the parents’ time off from work, nearly all Swedish parents (95–99%) utilize the Child Health
Centers between 11 and 13 times during the infant’s first year of life. The Child Health Centers help to monitor a child’s
growth and development, provide parenting support, immunizations, health education, health screenings, and provide referral
sources if the child has any special needs. However, fathers only use 22% of all parental leave days. Studies have pointed
out that fathers may not use parental leave because of corporate, maternal, and financial attitudes. Despite the Child Health
Centers’ policy of including both parents, fathers do not utilize the Child Health Centers to the same extent as mothers.
Research has shown that fathers may not use Child Health Centers as they are mainly only open during normal working hours,
they are dominated by females (staff and mothers), and many conversations during the child’s first year are directed towards
mothers. Barriers for why father involvement is lower than mothers are discussed.
early father involvement: participating in parental leave and at visits/activities at the Child Health Centers. Sweden has
one of the most comprehensive and egalitarian parental leave policies in the world, permitting parents to take 480 days off
of work, receive 80% of their pay for the first 15 months, and divide their leave however they see fit, barring that both
parents receive 2 months of parental leave that is exclusive to them. Additionally, fathers are permitted to take the first
ten working days off to be at home with his family. Most parents, especially mothers, use parental leave throughout their
infant’s first year. During the parents’ time off from work, nearly all Swedish parents (95–99%) utilize the Child Health
Centers between 11 and 13 times during the infant’s first year of life. The Child Health Centers help to monitor a child’s
growth and development, provide parenting support, immunizations, health education, health screenings, and provide referral
sources if the child has any special needs. However, fathers only use 22% of all parental leave days. Studies have pointed
out that fathers may not use parental leave because of corporate, maternal, and financial attitudes. Despite the Child Health
Centers’ policy of including both parents, fathers do not utilize the Child Health Centers to the same extent as mothers.
Research has shown that fathers may not use Child Health Centers as they are mainly only open during normal working hours,
they are dominated by females (staff and mothers), and many conversations during the child’s first year are directed towards
mothers. Barriers for why father involvement is lower than mothers are discussed.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-7
- DOI 10.1007/s10826-011-9487-7
- Authors
- Michael B. Wells, Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, Uppsala University, Uppsala, SHS Vårdcentrum, Box 609, 751 25 Uppsala, Sweden
- Anna Sarkadi, Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, Uppsala University, Uppsala, SHS Vårdcentrum, Box 609, 751 25 Uppsala, Sweden
- Journal Journal of Child and Family Studies
- Online ISSN 1573-2843
- Print ISSN 1062-1024