Future of Children > Children, Families, and Foster Care: Analysis and Recommendations (page 4 of 7) Strengthening
Families' Ability to Protect Healing Fragile Birth Families Children that come to the attention of child welfare agencies are typically from families with multiple problems and minimal resources. These fragile families are overwhelmingly poor, live in high-risk environments, and are often simultaneously grappling with such intractable problems as substance abuse, mental illness, physical illness, violence in the home, and inadequate housing. Child welfare agencies often do not provide an appropriate array of services and supports to meet the needs of these fragile families. Needed services may not be available or accessible, limiting the ability of birth families to meet their case plan requirements and regain custody of their children. For example, one study found that a lack of substance-abuse treatment programs, affordable housing, and other services were among the barriers birth families must overcome to be reunified with their children.60 Overcoming these barriers within the shortened timelines instituted under ASFA can be even more daunting. Many child welfare agencies are building partnerships with community-based agencies to provide more physically and culturally accessible services for families. For example, with the support of the Annie E. Casey Foundation, several child welfare agencies have begun implementing a community-based model of foster care called ?Family to Family? that draws on community resources so that children can be placed with families and receive services in their home communities.61 ?Strengths-based? family interventions are another tool that child welfare agencies can use to provide individualized supports and services to birth families. As several authors in this journal issue describe, too often child welfare workers prescribe the same services to all families despite their widely disparate needs, even though child welfare policy allows for more individualized services; and, too often, family assessments focus on deficits rather than strengths. As a result, birth families often experience the child welfare system as adversarial and may be reluctant to engage with a system they view as punitive. A strengths-based perspective identifies a family's positive qualities?such as employment, an extended family support network, or access to child care?and works to activate these strengths and incorporate them into the case plan. In addition, strengths-based practices such as family group conferencing actively incorporate family input into the decision-making process. A family group conference is a formal meeting in which the child's immediate family, extended family, and community members come together to develop a plan for care. Early evaluations suggest that family group conferencing can be an effective tool for developing appropriate case plans and achieving permanency.63 Moreover, such practices can temper the adversarial nature of the child welfare system and provide a basis for more consensual decision making on the child's behalf. As Wulczyn notes in this journal issue, although the overall rate of family reunification has declined in recent years, returning children safely to their birth families is an important goal of the child welfare system and remains the primary means of achieving permanence for children in foster care. Even when children are not reunified, birth families can be an important resource for children after they age out of the system. Significant investments in services are needed to help birth families overcome their problems and to prepare them to be reunified with their children or be a resource as their children transition out of care. RECOMMENDATION: Services for Birth Families Child welfare agencies should improve services to birth families by building partnerships with community-based organizations and integrating family-focused models, such as family group conferencing and mediation, into child welfare practice. Supporting Nonrelated Foster Families and Kin CaregiversEach year thousands of families open their homes and their hearts to children who have been removed from their birth families. Families often find the foster parenting experience both rewarding and overwhelming. Caring for children in foster care is a complex endeavor that requires families to navigate many systems and agencies. Although their needs may vary, nonrelated foster families and kin caregivers could both benefit from supportive services to help them nurture the children in their care. Nonrelated Foster
Families Kin Caregivers RECOMMENDATION: Services for Foster Families Child welfare agencies should develop an array of supports and services tailored to the needs of nonrelated foster families and kin caregivers, such as foster parent training and respite care, and ensure that their workforce is adequately trained to identify and respond to these families' needs. The Importance of After-Care Services Each year, about 260,000 children leave foster care: 57% to reunite with parents, 18% to be adopted, 10% to live with other relatives, and 3% to be cared for in legal guardianship arrangements.73 For most children, these families prove stable and lasting. But for some children, their new living arrangements fail shortly after they exit the system, especially when they reunify with their birth parents. In 2000, nearly 10% of children reunified with their parents returned to foster care within a year.74 In its most recent review of child outcomes, the Department of Health and Human Services found that states that had a high percentage of children reunified with their parents within 12 months of removal also had a high percentage of reentries into the foster care system.75 Of the 21 states that met the national standard for reunification timing, only two? Wyoming and South Carolina?also met the goal for reentries into foster care.76 Although, for methodological reasons, caution must be exercised in drawing definitive conclusions, these findings suggest that more services may be needed to support successful reunification. Recent research also suggests that children who are reunified with their birth parents may experience poorer outcomes compared to children who exited to other permanent placements.77 Again, these findings must be considered with caution. Determining what factors affect poor outcomes for maltreated children is often difficult to disentangle.78 However, research does indicate that the reunification process, and the reasons children may not thrive when they are reunified, warrant further study. At a minimum, these findings suggest that the availability, duration, and quality of services and supports provided to families in the postreunification period may be inadequate. Less is known about reentry rates for children who exit to adoption, legal guardianship, or kinship care, but the available data suggest that reentry rates are quite low. According to the article by Testa in this journal issue, data from one state, Illinois, indicate that between 1998 and 2000, only 1.5% of children who were adopted,79 and only about 2% of children placed with subsidized legal guardians, reentered foster care. Although the study did not include data on the stability of kinship care placements, these placements generally tend to have lower reentry rates than reunification when children are reunified. Nevertheless, kin placements are not immune to disruption, particularly when kin caregivers do not receive postpermanency services or financial assistance.80 When children are reunified with their birth parents or exit to another permanent placement, families need services to support the permanency process. Reunified families tend to need basic resources such as housing, employment, and income in addition to counseling, health services, and educational services.81 Adoptive parents report that they need more information on services available to them, assistance with educational services, access to after-school activities, and mental health counseling.82 Much less is known about the needs of kin families, but kinship caregivers and legal guardians probably need services similar to those needed by reunified families. Regardless of the type of placement, individualized case management and monitoring after placement are essential to ensure that families receive an appropriate array of services and to reduce the number of children returning to foster care.RECOMMENDATION: Support to Preserve Permanency Child welfare agencies should continue to support families following a permanent placement to promote children's well-being after exiting the system, whether that happens through reunification, adoption, or legal guardianship.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 Thank you for patronizing our fine advertisers via these links which helps to support our website — ChildrensHelp.com. |
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