Objectives
Existing studies on fathers’ involvement in childcare have focused on its impact on children’s psychosocial development and the facilitation of family functions, like marital relationships. In this study, we investigated the factors that determine paternal childcare in Japan, particularly focusing on work-related hours and environment, separately, according to mothers’ employment status.
Methods
We used data from the Longitudinal Survey of Newborns in the 21st Century (2010 cohort) conducted in Japan. We restricted the sample to 27,783 participants with working fathers and analyzed how paternal work-related factors affect fathers’ childcare involvement by mothers’ employment status using an ordered logistic regression model.
Results
In the model adjusting for all covariates, the odds ratio of spending less time with children on weekdays was higher: for fathers who worked 50 and more hours per week compared to those who worked 40-49 hours per week (OR = 1.95, 95% confidence interval (CI):1.72-2.20 for 50-59 hours), for fathers whose commuting hour was longer than those commuting less than 0.5 hours per day (OR = 2.93, 95%CI:2.34-3.69 for 1.5 or more hours), for larger workplace employee sizes than for 5-99 employee sizes (OR = 1.56, 95%CI:1.38-1.77 for 500 or more employees). The associations between these paternal work-related variables and paternal hours spent with the children on weekdays were almost the same if the mothers were not working.
Conclusions
Regardless of whether the mother is working, fathers’ work environment factors, such as working hours, play a key role in their involvement in childcare.