January 17, 2023

New Study Shows Paid Parental Leave Has Mental Health Benefits

A new meta study published in The Lancet provides a fresh reminder to lawmakers and policy experts that parental leave, especially paid leave, has numerous benefits, both for parental health and economic health, and leave is especially beneficial for mothers.

The study, in which Swedish researchers analyzed 45 previous studies focused on parental leave policies, determined that parents in countries with strong parental leave policies experienced less burnout, depression, and distress. Additionally, these effects lasted long after the initial postpartum period and in some cases reached into the later lives of parents.

As is well known already, financial uncertainty leads to worse mental and physical health outcomes. Throw being a new parent into the mix and you’ve got a recipe for serious problems. But in the case of parents who live in countries with generous paid parental policies, much of the stress from uncertainty is relieved, allowing parents to focus on their health and well-being along with that of their child’s.

As is also well known, the United States ranks dead last on the globe in terms of parental leave, and is the only developed nation that does not provide any paid leave for new parents. It remains a scandalous state of affairs that the United States cannot find the political will to develop federal-level policies that provide all parents with any parental leave. Instead, we leave it up to the whims of employers to provide meager, often unpaid leave to new parents, while mothers continue to face harsh repercussions for simply being pregnant. A number of states have passed Paid Parental Leave policies, but there is still no federal policy.

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Recording: Paid Family Leave in NY

June 8, 2020
Paid Family Leave
Pregnancy Discrimination
FMLA
Woven Bodies, an inclusive digital practice supporting queer folks + allies from family planning through parenthood hosted Associate Alex Berke to offer training on Paid Family Leave.

The Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Round Up

June 5, 2020
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This week we’re looking at the opportunity coronavirus has provided to rethink care structures in the US, the disproportionate impact lockdowns have had on black communities, and ballooning unemployment numbers for women over 55.

A Generation of Working Mothers Face Employment Disparities

June 4, 2020
Gender Discrimination
Pregnancy Discrimination
This week, the New York Times reports that the temporary setbacks to gender parity in the workplace are in danger of being close to permanent, leaving a whole generation of women behind their male cohort in the workplace. There has been a decade of fragile progress since the Great Recession, and in February, women represented a majority of civilian, non-farm workers employed in the country.

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