that may also have to do with the fact that workers are burnt out and quitting. so, you know, the pandemic alone or rather the declining hospitalizations alone will not get us where we need to be, but it will help. so we ve talked before about how the pandemic economy has hit women harder than it has men, and we ve seen that in this report. women lost 26,000 jobs in september. men actually gained jobs. what s behind that? well, i think it is partly this child care issue, right, as i said, schools have reopened, and that s good. that should be good for women s employment in particular, because women are more likely to be the family s primary care givers, but you have schools shutting down periodically because there s an outbreak or isolated kids get imquarantined. that s bad for women, and the fields that women are more likely to work in have also struggled, so, for example, women are more likely to work in certain service sector areas,
10:00 a.m. because that s a lower lying area, a barrier island. it s going to be a voluntary evacuation at 10:00 a.m. in some areas it could be mandatory. officials here telling us that they want to make sure they get them into solid shelters, that they are very well taken care of and in a safe place. one official told me if elderly people have to be moved to shelters, they have to bring their primary care givers with them because they don t have enough personnel to take care of their needs. so you can imagine that s bigging worry tonight, don. we re looking at possible storm surge that s going to inundate where i m standing and palm beach, the barrier island to my left. mandatory evacuations starting at 10:00 a.m. tomorrow. and a real concern about the safety of the prominent elderly population of this county. brian todd, i want to give a
since i m the one that has to do the laundry, i do what any expert dad would do. i let her play sheriff. you are free to go. advertisers are recognizing, there are more and more men being primary care givers of children. so they are targeting these guys in ads. reporter: this super bowl sunday, the biggest advertising day of the year, a tear jerker from dove. dad? dad? arguing the strongest men are the ones who care for their kids. i m matt gutman for nightline in miami. he is a cutie. that s cute. he is a cutie. you are a dad who juggles it all. you have no choice. sometimes it can come off as offensive that we don t know what we are doing and can t handle things. the child is in danger at home with dad. we do things differently. i may leave the diaper on an extra hour and a half. you are a very dedicated dad to your sabine. i have to be. i don t have a choice. i m with her all the time. i am with her as soon as i get
our time schedules are tight. it is very convenient for us. reporter: but dr. rodriguez says walmart is taking it a step further and he s concerned that primary care givers at the helm are nurse practitioners, not docto doctors. their training and expertise is not the same as primary care physicians. reporter: walmart is opening six more primary care clinics by the end. year. it tells abc news we aim to be part of a continuum of care, while driving down costs for our associates and customers. adding that it also offers referrals to specialists as needed. brandi hitt, abc new, los angeles. you know, it makes sense. bring the clinic to where people are. there s certainly a need for it. a big movement. target doing it. cvs doing it with the minute clinics. if you find me there, after hours i understand amongst your many duties also include patient care there. that s right. i love the white jacket. where do you find the time for all of this?
about what it meant for them to be good dads? well, i just wanted to give them a voice. like i said, i was married. we ehhad a child. during the marriage one of the primary care givers waking them up for school, giving them a bath, taking them to the park and things like that. after the divorce, all of a sudden, i couldn t do that any more. basically a judge told me that i could see him two weekends out of the month and i felt something was wrong with that. again, you can imagine the feelings that come with not being able to see your child when you want to. so, i started thinking of other people, other fathers who felt this way and that kind of spawned this whole interview thing with them talking to different fathers and we re feeling the same way. mark, stick with us, i thought that was so val yrbuabl t.j. i read your piece in advance of father s day and i chatted with