The Neuroscience of paid parental leave
Observations Having parents present is crucial during an infant’s first weeks of development—but institutions that train physicians don’t always seem to care The Neuroscience of Paid Parental Leave By Daniel Barron on October 30, 2017 Credit: Halfpoint Getty Images As a new father, I’ve learned that the U.S. ranks at the very bottom of industrialized nations for paid parental leave. Denmark offers a year. Italy offers five months. France offers 16 weeks; Mexico, 12 weeks; Afghanistan, 13. According to a 2016 Pew Research Center analysis of 41 countries, the U.S. is the only one to offer zero paid parental leave. It is easy (and likely accurate) to assume that paid parental leave policies are a nice gesture to help exhausted, stressed-out parents have the time and resources to figure out how to care for an infant. Perhaps this is why it is often bundled with leaves for tending to a sick family member. But the focus should more directly on the infants themselves, with parental lea...