TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Chapter 96. Families in the 21st Century: An Introduction to Families A1 - Bauman, Laurie J. A1 - Stein, Ruth E. K. A2 - Rudolph, Colin D. A2 - Rudolph, Abraham M. A2 - Lister, George E. A2 - First, Lewis R. A2 - Gershon, Anne A. PY - 2011 T2 - Rudolph's Pediatrics, 22e AB - Pediatricians provide care for children who live in a variety of family situations. Children may live with two working parents, unmarried parents, grandparents, or another nonparental caregiver, or they may live in single-parent families where the mother may be divorced or never married, or they may live with gay parents, in foster homes, or in blended families. The traditional nuclear family, consisting of a mother and a father who are married and living with their biological children, is becoming rare; in fact, only 25% of households fit this description.1 Although it was the norm three decades ago, today only one half of American households include a married couple, and only one half of those have children.1 Only one third of preschoolers are raised in a two-parent home with a working father and a mother who stays home full-time.2 Given the diversity of family forms, it is important to identify the ideas central to the definition of family. SN - PB - The McGraw-Hill Companies CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2024/04/19 UR - accesspediatrics.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=6739137 ER -