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Operationalizing family Examples from the Millennium Cohort Study

Operationalizing family Examples from the Millennium Cohort Study. Lidia Panico Department of Epidemiology and Public Health University College London l.panico@ucl.ac.uk. Changing demographic context of parenthood. Source: Office for National Statistics.

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Operationalizing family Examples from the Millennium Cohort Study

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  1. Operationalizing family Examples from the Millennium Cohort Study Lidia Panico Department of Epidemiology and Public Health University College London l.panico@ucl.ac.uk

  2. Changing demographic context of parenthood Source: Office for National Statistics

  3. Changing demographic context of parenthood Source: Office for National Statistics

  4. Sociology and family • 1950s sociology • Feminist critique of the 1970s and 80s • Today: individualism, diversity and “doing” family

  5. Insights from demography • Beanpole families • Non-resident parents

  6. At an individual level.. Levin and Trost (1992) Family Relations, Vol. 41, No. 3

  7. How is family operationalised in quantitative studies? UK 2001 Census definition: “a married or cohabiting couple with or without child(ren) or a lone parent with child(ren). Child(ren) may be dependent or non-dependent.”

  8. Structure of analysis • How can we translate sociological theory empirically in the secondary analysis of a large, interdisciplinary data set? • How can we adapt this to a health outcome? • Does it affect child health?

  9. Millennium Cohort Study • Prospective cohort study • 18,000 children born in 2000/2001 in the UK • Over-sample of ethnically mixed and disadvantaged areas • Home interviews • Sweep 1-- 9 months • Sweep 2-- 3 years • Sweep 3-- 5 years

  10. Pooling and sharing of resources HH socio-economic characteristics Family structure Family processes Quality of relationships Child health and wellbeing Health behaviours Networks

  11. Pooling and sharing of resources HH demographic & socio-economic characteristics Family structure Family processes Quality of relationships Child health and wellbeing Health behaviours Networks

  12. Family characteristics

  13. Diversity over the lifecourse

  14. Proportion of households who experience a change in parents

  15. Ethnic variation in family living arrangements

  16. The larger family

  17. Do family living arrangements affect child health? Mean birthweight by family living arrangement

  18. Conclusion • Different family structures have different socio-economic profiles • Diversity of family structures over the lifecourse • The importance of non-resident parents and grandparents • Diversity over ethnic groups

  19. Thank you Mel Bartley Yvonne Kelly Anne McMunn Amanda Sacker ESRC/MRC

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