Vol. 8, No. 1 November 2003
Nationally,
Foster Parents and Adoptive Relatives Adopt Majority of Children with
Special Needs
A June 2003
research brief from the Urban Institute outlines characteristics of
parents who adopt children from the foster care system. The report,
Who Will Adopt the Foster Care Children Left Behind?, found foster
parents and relatives were more likely than the general population to
adopt waiting children. The information in the brief may offer clues
to help States further hone their recruitment efforts. Some of the other
findings include:
- Foster parent adoptions
accounted for 56% of the children adopted from foster care in fiscal
year (FY) 1999.
- Relative adoptions accounted
for 20% of foster care adoptions in FY 1999. Relatives also cared
for an additional 24,000 children in the foster care system.
- Foster parents were found
to be similar to general applicants in terms of age, marital status,
and race. Relative adopters, however, were found to be significantly
older and less likely to be married than foster parents or general
applicants.
- Relatives (not surprisingly)
were more similar in race and ethnicity to the children they adopted
than were foster parents or general applicants.
- Adoptions by general
applicants were more likely to be transracial than foster-parent adoptions.
- The children in foster
care waiting for adoptive families tend to be closest in characteristics
to the children adopted by relatives (older, male, and Black). Children
who are adopted from foster care are younger and more likely to be
female, Caucasian, and Hispanic.
The author
notes that because Black parents already adopt foster children at a
rate double their proportion in the population, it might be unrealistic
to expect to identify enough Black families for the children still waiting
for homes. He suggests agencies may be able to increase the number of
children adopted from foster care by dismantling barriers to relative
adoption, encouraging foster parenting as a precursor to adoption, and
helping families overcome challenges involved in transracial and special
needs adoptions.
The full
report is available at <http://www.urban.org/urlprint.cfm?ID=8465>.
Reprinted from the Childrens Bureau Express (September 2003).
Online <http://cbexpress.acf.hhs.gov>
Copyright �
2003 Jordan Institute for Families