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Lesbian Parents & Their Well-Adjusted Kids: What the Study Really Means

The landmark lesbian family study reveals that children of lesbian couples thrive, often outperforming peers in adjustment and academics.

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The U.S. National Longitudinal Lesbian Family Study, a quarter-century look at the welfare of kids born to lesbian couples, has finally come out in the journal Pediatrics this week with the headline-grabbing finding that those children not only do as well as the rest of the population, they might actually fare better. You can download the paper by lead author Nanette Gartrell for free right now, but here are the key parts: Select population only Census data says that there are more than 270,000 American kids in same-sex households, with twice that many having a single gay parent. Gartrell's study follows a particular slice: Lesbian couples who were together before the child's birth, identified themselves as a lesbian couple, and went through the artificial insemination process. It didn't include, for instance, women who may have had a child in a previous heterosexual relationship and then entered into a lesbian one ...

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