“Child care insecurity
is a term we’ve come up with to describe limited
or uncertain access to adequate child care. It factors into
many Americans’ decisions whether to even have
a child. Parents – mothers especially – often weigh the cost of child care in
their decision to return to work. And when a kid has a disability, there may
not even be child care options that meet the family’s needs.
“As researchers who
study how policies and systems affect well-being and health, we argue that
child care insecurity is a public health issue similar to food insecurity. And just as with food
insecurity, increasing access is necessary. However, access alone will not
address the problem.
Why child care
insecurity matters
“Female caregivers in
the U.S. have traditionally borne most of the burden of finding and managing
child care and providing care directly. This results in stalled careers, higher stress and lower earnings. When schools and child care
facilities were forced to close or restrict access during the COVID-19
pandemic, millions more American parents and
guardians – men and women alike – found themselves suddenly facing child care
insecurity. This affected their well-being and mental health.
“A group of health
psychologists surveyed parents throughout the beginning
of the COVID-19 pandemic. About 4% of the parents reported having high stress
levels ‘before COVID-19.’ But by May 2020, that share had ballooned to 22%.
Meanwhile, sociologists who surveyed
and interviewed U.S. mothers in April and May of 2020 found
that not having child care affected mothers’ interpersonal interactions – such
as increased frustration with their children – and quality of life.
How common is it?
“In January 2020, 26
million working caregivers in the U.S. ‘did not have an in-home care option’ –
whether a parent, grandparent or older sibling – for children 14 years and
younger, according to a Rand Corp. analysis of data from the U.S. Department
of Labor. A World Bank Report from December 2020
estimated that globally, over 40% of all children who needed quality child care
or preschool in 2018 did not have access to it. That’s nearly 350 million kids.
“President Joe Biden has proposed some national policies to
address child care insecurity in the U.S. – for example, limiting the
percentage of income families need to spend on child care to 7% by providing subsidies to care
providers. This would likely improve access. However, child care insecurity is
not always based on economic constraints. The quality of child care, location,
hours and access for children with disabilities can all play a role as well.”
(The Conversation, Cassandra M. Johnson, Assistant
Professor of Nutrition and Foods, Texas State University; Shailen Singh, Assistant
Professor, Department of Organization, Workforce, & Leadership Studies,
Texas State University)
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