AI Article Synopsis

  • Partnered fathers who reside with their children tend to have lower testosterone levels and higher abdominal fat compared to single men who do not have children.
  • Reduced testosterone is linked to various chronic diseases, suggesting that life history status may impact men's health.
  • While partnered fathers did not show significant differences in certain cardiovascular disease risk factors like triglycerides or white blood cell count, their lower testosterone levels were associated with increased abdominal fat, potentially raising their cardiovascular disease risk.

Article Abstract

In many settings, partnered, invested fathers have lower testosterone than single men or fathers who are not involved in caregiving. Reduced testosterone has been identified as a risk factor for multiple chronic diseases, and men's health also commonly varies by life history status. There have been few tests of whether variation in testosterone based on partnering and parenting has implications for men's health. We analysed data from a US population-representative sample (NHANES) of young-to-middle aged US men ( = 875; mean age: 29.8 years ± 6.0 [SD]). We tested for life history status differences in testosterone, adiposity levels and biomarkers of cardiovascular disease (CVD)-risk (HDL cholesterol; triglycerides; white blood cell count [WBC]). Partnered men residing with children (RC) had lower testosterone and elevated abdominal adiposity compared to never married men not residing with children. While they did not significantly differ for WBC or triglycerides, partnered RC men also had comparatively lower HDL. Partnered RC males' lower testosterone accounted for their relatively elevated adiposity, but testosterone, adiposity, and health-related covariates did not explain their relatively reduced HDL. Our results linking life history status-based differences in testosterone and adiposity, alongside our complementary HDL findings, indicate that testosterone-related psychobiology might have implications for partnered RC men's CVD risk in the US and other similar societal settings. These types of socially contextualized observations of men's health and physiological function particularly merit incorporation in clinical discussions of fatherhood as a component of men's health.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5397396PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/emph/eox005DOI Listing

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