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June 1, 2006 -- With Father's Day right around the corner, a new CDC report is painting a picture of fatherhood in the U.S.
Information came from a national survey of 4,928 men aged 15-44 years. There were 61 million men in that age range in the U.S. at the time. Interviews for the survey were done between March 2002 and March 2003 in participants' homes.
The survey of men showed:
How Many Kids?
Among men who took the survey, 17% reported fathering one child, 16% reported fathering two children, and 14% reported fathering three or more kids.
Nearly two-thirds -- 64% --reported having their first child when they were in their 20s. Another 15% reported fathering their first child before age 20, and 21% reported having their first child at or after age 30.
Men who hadn't finished high school were more likely to have fathered a child outside of marriage, compared with those with a four-year college degree, the survey shows.
The report also notes that "among men reporting themselves to be homosexual or bisexual, 22% have had a biological child."
Married or Not?
The survey also covered marriages and live-in relationships:
Marrying before 20 was associated with a higher rate of broken marriages a decade later. Among men who married for the first time before age 20, half "had their marriage dissolve within 10 years compared with 17% of men who married at 26 years or over," the report states.
The report shows that of the 61 million U.S. men aged 15-44 in 2002:
Almost all dads (98%) supported the statement, "The rewards of being a parent are worth it despite the cost and work it takes."
SOURCES: CDC's National Center for Health Statistics: "Fertility, Contraception, and Fatherhood: Data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth." News release, CDC.