single-parent family


family

 [fam´ĭ-le] 1. a group of people related by blood or marriage or a strong common bond, such as those descended from a common ancestor, or a husband, wife, and their children.2. a taxonomic category below an order and above a genus.blended family a family unit composed of a married couple and their offspring including some from previous marriages.dysfunctional family one in which adult caregivers are unable to consistently fulfill their family responsibilities.extended family a nuclear family and their close relatives, such as the children's grandparents, aunts, and uncles.nuclear family a family consisting of a two-generation relationship of parents and children, living together and more or less isolated from their extended family.nuclear dyad family a husband and wife with no children.family of origin the family in which a person grew up.family processes the psychosocial, physiological, and spiritual functions and relationships within the family unit; for nursing diagnoses, see under process.single-parent family a lone parent and offspring living together as a family unit.skewed family a family in which one spouse is severely dysfunctional and the other spouse assumes an acquiescent, peacemaking stance to maintain equilibrium.family (omaha) in the omaha system, a problem modifier defined as a social unit or related group of individuals who live together and who experience a health-related problem.

single-parent family

Social medicine A family unit with a mother or father and unmarried children. See Father 'factor. ', Latchkey children, Quality time, Supermom. Cf Extended family, Nuclear family, Two parent advantage.

sin·gle-par·ent fam·i·ly

(sing'gĕl par'ěnt fam'i-lē) A group in which the children live with only one parent.