# When parental care hurts: extended parental care and the evolution of overparenting

**Authors:** David W Lawson, Zhian Chen

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/emph/eoaf027 · Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health · 2025-10-21

## TL;DR

This paper explores how modern parenting styles, known as overparenting, may negatively affect both parents and children, and how this phenomenon can be understood through an evolutionary lens.

## Contribution

The paper introduces an evolutionary framework to analyze overparenting as a mismatch to current socioecological conditions.

## Key findings

- Overparenting is characterized as an extreme continuation of extended parental care in human history.
- Four socioecological shifts are hypothesized to incentivize increased parental care.
- An evolutionary perspective on overparenting can guide new research and interventions.

## Abstract

In recent years, childrearing in high-income countries has become described as ‘relentless’ in its demands on parents. In response to growing delays in social and financial independence, public health professionals have even advocated for redefining adulthood to begin at later ages. There is also growing concern, not just about the wellbeing of exhausted parents, but of children whose parents are deemed to provide developmentally inappropriate care that may undermine their independence and foster poor mental health. In this review, we describe such ‘overparenting’, an intensive style of modern parenting considered costly to both parent and offspring wellbeing, as a phenomenon of increasing public health relevance, before putting these concerns into an evolutionary framework. We characterize overparenting as an extreme and maladaptive continuation of trends in extended parental care that have characterized much of human (evolutionary) history, highlighting four relevant socioecological shifts hypothesized to incentivize increases in parental care: (i) lowering extrinsic risk, (ii) increased reliance on skill-intensive production, (iii) escalating intergenerational wealth transfers, and (iv) reduced availability of alloparents. From this perspective overparenting within high-income countries presents an underappreciated example of evolutionary mismatch to prevailing socioecological conditions. To conclude, we discuss how an evolutionary perspective on overparenting may help promote new research directions and inform the design of initiatives aimed at improving both parent and child wellbeing.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

147 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12551458/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12551458