Always private
DuckDuckGo never tracks your searches.
Learn More
You can hide this reminder in Search Settings
All regions
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium (fr)
Belgium (nl)
Brazil
Bulgaria
Canada (en)
Canada (fr)
Catalonia
Chile
China
Colombia
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India (en)
Indonesia (en)
Ireland
Israel (en)
Italy
Japan
Korea
Latvia
Lithuania
Malaysia (en)
Mexico
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
Pakistan (en)
Peru
Philippines (en)
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain (ca)
Spain (es)
Sweden
Switzerland (de)
Switzerland (fr)
Taiwan
Thailand (en)
Turkey
Ukraine
United Kingdom
US (English)
US (Spanish)
Vietnam (en)
Safe search: moderate
Strict
Moderate
Off
Any time
Any time
Past day
Past week
Past month
Past year
  1. onlinelibrary.wiley.com

    Jun 6, 2024It is thus widely assumed that re-partnering improves single mothers' life satisfaction and mental health by reducing their parenting stress (Cooper et al., 2009). For example, mothers who re-partner may be able to spend more time on enjoyable and rewarding activities with their children (Meier et al., 2016).
  2. Was this helpful?
  3. demogr.mpg.de

    a negative impact on single mothers' life satisfaction and mental health. 2ne argument is that re-partnering may drain the resources of a single mother (Hughes and Waite 2009) if, for example, she must make a residential move (Cooper et al. 2009; Sweeney 2007) or is in an unstable rela-
  4. research.tilburguniversity.edu

    In contrast, the crisis model suggests that when a mother re-partners, her mental health and life satisfaction further decline because re-partnering can trigger conflicts in the family.MethodUsing long-term annual panel data from Germany and the United Kingdom, fixed-effects regressions reveal effects among 1101 single mothers from Germany and ...
  5. researchgate.net

    In contrast, the crisis model suggests that when a mother re‐partners, her mental health and life satisfaction further decline because re‐partnering can trigger conflicts in the family.
  6. iser.essex.ac.uk

    Life satisfaction was positively affected by re-partnering in Germany, mainly driven by income-related factors. The positive association in the UK was less strong. Patterns of mental health trajectories indicate clearer differences between the two countries: based on point estimates, we observed an increasing trajectory in Germany and a ...
  7. mother's life satisfaction and mental health (Recksiedler & Bernardi, 2019; Thompson & Ensminger, 1989). Consequently, it is widely supported that re-partnering in the sense of co-resid-ing leads to better life satisfaction and mental health in single mothers due to a reduction in par-
  8. semanticscholar.org

    This study examines single mothers' mental health and life satisfaction trajectories around re‐partnering transitions, and the driving factors of these associations.Single mothers are a particularly disadvantaged group in terms of their mental health and life satisfaction. According to the resource model, re‐partnering has a positive effect on these outcomes because it provides additional ...
  9. Re-Partnering and Single Mothers' Mental Health and Life Satisfaction Trajectories ... selection mechanisms into re-partnering of single mothers, but without modeling trajectories longitudinally. ... Years before/after re-partnering Life satisfaction 44 46 48 50 alues edicted v Pr-2/-1 0 +1/+2 +3/+5
  10. semanticscholar.org

    Feb 1, 2023Semantic Scholar extracted view of "Re-partnering and single mothers' mental health and life satisfaction trajectories" by Philipp Dierker et al. Skip to search form Skip to main content Skip to account menu. Semantic Scholar's Logo. Search 222,591,234 papers from all fields of science. Search ...
  11. Can’t find what you’re looking for?

    Help us improve DuckDuckGo searches with your feedback

Custom date rangeX