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Gretchen Livingston, a senior Pew researcher who co-authored the report, noted that fathers who live away from their children are not always absent from their kids' lives. More than 20 percent of such dads said they saw their children several times a week, and even more
-- 41 percent -- kept in touch regularly through phone calls or email. Still, 27 percent of fathers who live away from their children reported that they didn't see them at all in the past year, and almost one-third communicated by phone or email with their children less than once a month. "Overall, we can't say whether kids are better off or not," she said. Other findings: In all, about 46 percent of fathers ages 15 to 44 say they had at least one of their children born outside of marriage. That figure tracks closely with government data showing the share of babies born to unwed mothers jumping eightfold, from 5 percent in 1960 to 41 percent in 2008. The public is divided over whether fathers are more involved in their children's lives than 20 or 30 years ago. About 46 percent say dads today play a bigger role, while 45 percent say they are less involved. Despite greater involvement of some married fathers, the number of hours mothers spent per week taking care of children at home rose modestly from 10.6 hours in 1965 to 12.9 hours in 2000. Some sociologists say that may be due to fathers seeing themselves as secondary caregivers, more apt to play with children while the mothers change diapers or manage schedules. Among all adults, 57 percent say it is more difficult to be a father today than it was 20 or 30 years ago. About 9 percent say being a father is now easier, while 32 percent say it is about the same. Pew based its findings on Census Bureau figures as well as National Center for Health Statistics survey data from 2006-2008, the latest available. On behalf of Pew, Princeton Survey Research Associates International also interviewed 2,006 people 18 and older by cellphone or landline from May 26-29 and June 2-5. The Pew survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points. ___ Online: Pew Social and Demographic Trends:
http://pewsocialtrends.org/
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