children in foster care
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Author(s):  
Paola Ricchiardi ◽  
Cristina Coggi

Foster care is a condition of welcoming children with families in serious difficulty, legally regulated, aimed at guaranteeing to minors a suitable space for growth, and to families of origin the possibility of overcoming the problems so as to consent the return of the children. It is a challenging educational condition, to be deepened with research. The complexity of the backgrounds of origin and the co-presence of multiple risk factors in fact generate in children and young people in foster care, important difficulties in development, which foster families have to cope with, also with the support of specialists, services and associations. However, the skills that caregivers come to build over the years are valuable, deserving of pedagogical insights, so that good practices of positive parenting can be valued and shared. In this paper we will report the results of a survey, carried out with a national sample of 323 foster families. The study makes it possible to investigate the reasons for the custody prevision, the relationships with families of origin, the difficult life trajectories of the children in foster care (transitions, placements, discontinuities, years of foster care, continuation of relationships after foster care). In this way it is possible to identify the needs highlighted by the minors, the relevant problems that emerge and the promising strategies adopted by the foster families.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiley W. Liming ◽  
Becci Akin ◽  
Jody Brook

OBJECTIVES To examine the impact of cumulative adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) on a child’s foster care placement stability in Kansas. METHODS Secondary data analysis was conducted by using a purposive cohort sample of 2998 children, from 6 to 18 years old, in Kansas’s foster care system between October 2015 and July 2019. Multivariate hierarchical logistic regression models were used to examine the influence of cumulative ACEs on a child's placement stability. ACEs were measured at foster care intake and self-reported by the child. Placement stability variables were obtained through the state administrative database. RESULTS Children in foster care with greater cumulative ACE exposure were significantly more likely to experience placement instability. Compared to children with 1 to 5 ACEs, when controlling for all other variables, children with ≥10 ACEs had an increased odds of experiencing placement instability by 31% (odds ratio: 1.31; P < .05); and children with 6 to 9 ACEs had a 52% (odds ratio: 1.52, P < .001) increased odds of experiencing placement instability. A child’s race, biological sex, age at episode start, and whether they had siblings in foster care all significantly influenced placement instability. CONCLUSIONS Findings from this study, in conjunction with previous research on ACEs and foster care, highlight the need to proactively address ACEs and trauma exposure at foster care entry.


2021 ◽  
pp. 251610322110554
Author(s):  
Jodi C. Coon ◽  
John T. Rapp ◽  
Erica Ramey

Although prescribers frequently use psychotropic medication to treat emotional and behavioral problems for children in foster care, and states are required to monitor psychotropic medication usage with foster youth, few studies have evaluated the extent to which prescribers decrease psychotropic medication. We developed a system to track medication decreases for foster youth to ascertain why deprescriptions occurred. Researchers reviewed case files for 223 children and adolescents in a child welfare system who had received services via a state-funded project from October 2016 through January 2021. We found 99 individuals who had (a) prescriptions for one or more psychotropic medications at intake and (b) received both behavioral and medication review services. Results show only 32 (32%) of individuals in this sample experienced a deprescription of psychotropic medication while receiving services from the project. Analyses for these 32 individuals revealed four key findings. First, the most frequently deprescribed medications were stimulants and antipsychotics. Second, the most common reasons for decreasing any psychotropic medication were (a) medication advocacy and (b) adverse side effects. Notably, only foster youth aged 12 years or younger experienced medication reductions due to adverse side effects. Third, stimulants and antipsychotics accounted for the highest percentage of undesirable side effects. Fourth, practitioners deprescribed stimulants and antipsychotics for adverse side effects two times more often than for behavior or symptom improvement. These findings may contribute to the development of deprescribing guidelines for children in state welfare systems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nuria Fuentes‐Peláez ◽  
Carme Montserrat ◽  
Rosa Sitjes‐Figueras ◽  
Gemma Crous

Demography ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander F. Roehrkasse

Abstract This study combines and standardizes multiple sources of administrative data to calculate rates of children in foster care in the United States from 1961 to 2018, more than tripling the length of previously available time series. Results yield novel insights about historical, geographic, and ethnoracial variation in children's experience of living without parents under state supervision. National rates of children in foster care rose from 3 per 1,000 in 1963 to a peak of almost 8 per 1,000 in 1997 before declining to just under 6 per 1,000 in 2018. After stable or increasing racial inequality in the late twentieth century, disparities between Black/African American and White children began to decrease in the twenty-first century in nearly every state, closing entirely in several Southern states but remaining wide outside the South. In many Midwestern and Western states, the extreme overrepresentation of American Indian/Alaska Native children in foster care persisted or intensified.


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