and it is worrisome because of its effect on the couples, children and society at large. Thus,
this article examines the rate of IPDB, its causes, consequences and effective ways of managing
them in Oyo State, Nigeria. A questionnaire was administered on 400 respondents for this
survey. Discussion of findings is underpinned with Social Exchange and Feminist Theories.
Findings show an increase in infidelity among salaried workers (m= 4.3.6), self-employed
(3.9), urban centres inhabitants (m= 3.6), polygamous households (m= 4.1), monogamous
households (m= 4.7), illiterate people (m= 4.2) and literate people (m=3.8). Causes include
neglect of family responsibilities (m= 4.3), sexual incompatibility (m= 3.8), bullying (m= 3.
7), poverty (m= 4.1) and covetousness/greed (m= 4.8). Consequences include poor partners’
mental health (m= 3.2), violent behaviour (m= 4.7), withdrawal syndrome (m= 3.8), divorce
(m= 4.6) and low productivity at work (m=4.0).
Traditional family interventions prevent
divorce (m= 4.3), religious bodies mitigate divorce (m= 4.5), therapeutic counselling relieves
mental health (m=3.6), mediation centres transform relationship (m= 3.4), social works
adjudication removes social stigmatization (m= 3.9) and DNA test reduces suicidal thought
(m= 3.9). The incidents of infidelity, paternity dispute and bastardy generate complex social
as well as legal challenges in Oyo state, Nigeria. Thus, regular studies of these phenomena
remain the only means of understanding their dynamics and mitigating the consequences.
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