(Press-News.org) The most comprehensive study ever to be carried out into adoption in England has confirmed that the rate of breakdown is lower than anticipated, but it also reveals a stark picture of the problems faced by families.
Researchers from the University of Bristol analysed national data on 37,335 adoptions over a 12 year period to show that 3.2 per cent of children – around three in 100 - move out of their adoptive home prematurely, known as a 'disruption'.
Adoptions were more likely to breakdown if a child was placed once they were over the age of four. Most adoptions breakdown during the teenage years with teenagers 10 times more at risk of disruption compared with children under the age of four.
This is an important finding as services have focused on providing support in the early years of the placement. There are very few services for adopted young people and those parenting adopted teenagers.
In depth analysis of the circumstances of 70 families showed that this low rate of disruption was down to the commitment and tenacity of parents who stuck by their children in extremely testing circumstances.
The study, funded by the Department for Education and published today [9 April], is the first national study of adoption breakdowns and gives recommendations for policy, practice and further research in the future.
In addition to analysing national data on adoptions, parents who adopted a child between April 2002 and March 2004 in 13 local authorities were asked to complete a survey about their experiences. The same survey was posted on the Adoption UK website. It was returned by 390 adoptive parents, caring for 689 children who had been placed by 77 different local authorities. The majority of parents (66%) reported that the adoptions were going well.
In this study, the focus was on adoptions that were in great difficulty. Researchers interviewed 35 parents whose children had left home prematurely and 35 parents whose children still lived at home but considered caring for them to be very difficult.
It found that the families who had experienced a disruption and those who were finding parenting very challenging were dealing with teenagers with mental health problems that were associated with the young people's histories of sexual abuse, neglect and exposure to domestic violence.
Of those children whose adoption placements had broken down, 91 per cent had witnessed domestic violence and 34 per cent had been sexually abused before they were adopted. Mental health problems were prevalent in the children who had left home, with 97 per cent scoring in the clinical range of mental health problems (compared to 10 per cent in the general population) and a quarter had been diagnosed with autistic behaviours.
Violence was a significant factor in the young person leaving their adoptive home in 80 per cent of cases, combined with involvement in crime, life threatening self-harm and running away. Of those interviewed, 27 per cent of parents reported worrying behaviour shown by their child around the use of knives. Services did not know how to respond when it was a young person being violent to a parent.
Professor Julie Selwyn, Head of the Hadley Centre for Adoption and Foster Care Studies at the University of Bristol, said: "The disruption rate was lower than we expected. The reasons for that became obvious when we met the families, whose commitment and tenacity was remarkable in very testing circumstances.
"We had not expected child to parent violence to feature so strongly in parental accounts of challenging behaviour. Young people were mainly violent to their mothers, but fathers, siblings, pets and in one case, grandparents had also been assaulted.
"There is an urgent need for Children's Services to develop support services for adopted teenagers and their parents and for mental health services for young people to be improved. Although disruptions were rare, the impact of a disruption was enormous."
As a child's behaviour became more difficult during adolescence, parents described feeling isolated and stigmatised by other parents and blamed by professionals for the child's challenging behaviours.
More than a quarter (27 per cent) found themselves threatened with or subjected to a child protection investigation, which had a lasting effect on their employment and mental health.
About a quarter of the 70 parents stated they had received good support from social workers but their efforts to get help were often thwarted by agencies who refused to see adopted children or were only able to offer what could be provided in-house.
Parents were rarely referred onto specialist services and were consequently offered the same ineffective interventions time and time again.
Since leaving the adoptive family home, most of the young people had re-entered care and had multiple placements and continued to display challenging behaviours - starting fires, self-harming, attacking care workers and the police - and some had committed serious criminal offences.
However, most adoptive parents continued to parent albeit at a distance. Parents were concerned about the young person's future and were afraid that the young person would end up in prison, be exploited by those who prey on vulnerable young people or may die.
The impact on parents was far-reaching with 13 of the 35 parents of children who had left home showing symptoms which indicated they had post-traumatic stress disorder and nearly half had symptoms of moderate to severe depression.
INFORMATION:
The report, entitled 'Beyond the Adoption Order: challenges, intervention, disruption', was carried out by the Hadley Centre for Adoption and Foster Care Studies, based in the School for Policy Studies at the University of Bristol and funded by the Department for Education.
New research reveals the reality of adoption breakdowns
2014-04-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study tests theory that life originated at deep sea vents
2014-04-09
One of the greatest mysteries facing humans is how life originated on Earth. Scientists have determined approximately when life began (roughly 3.8 billion years ago), but there is still intense debate about exactly how life began. One possibility - that simple metabolic reactions emerged near ancient seafloor hot springs, enabling the leap from a non-living to a living world – has grown in popularity in the last two decades.
Recent research by geochemists Eoghan Reeves, Jeff Seewald, and Jill McDermott at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) is the first to test ...
Refrigerant in cars: Refreshingly cool, potentially toxic
2014-04-09
The refrigerant R1234yf is being considered for use in air conditioning systems in cars. Chemists at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich now show that, in the event of a fire, it releases the highly poisonous carbonyl fluoride, and urge that its safety be reassessed.
According to EU guidelines, the new compound R1234yf should in future be used as the refrigerant in air-conditioning systems for automobiles. But the compound is inflammable, and LMU chemists have now shown that combustion of the cooling agent leads to the formation of the highly toxic carbonyl ...
Chance meeting creates celestial diamond ring
2014-04-09
Most stars with masses similar to that of our Sun will end their lives as white dwarfs — small, very dense, and hot bodies that slowly cool down over billions of years. On the way to this final phase of their lives the stars throw their atmospheres out into the space and create planetary nebulae, colourful glowing clouds of gas surrounding the small, bright stellar relics.
This image, captured by ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT), shows the remarkably round planetary nebula Abell 33, located some 1500 light-years from Earth. Being perfectly round is uncommon for these ...
EASL publishes online recommendations on the management of hepatitis C
2014-04-09
London, UK, Wednesday 9 April 2014: The European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) will this week be announcing new on-line recommendations on the management of hepatitis C (HCV) at the International Liver Congress™ (ILC). These EASL recommendations reflect the approval of three new direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) during 2014 by the European Medicines Agency.
It is estimated that approximately 185 million people are infected with HCV on a global scale, with approximately 150 million people living with chronic infection. In Europe, between 7.3 million and ...
Women and minorities more likely to receive stroke misdiagnosis
2014-04-09
Women and minorities more likely to receive stroke misdiagnosis
Article provided by Davis & Davis
Visit us at http://www.dfwmedmal.com
The misdiagnosis of an illness or disease can have tragic consequences. A patient complaining of headaches and dizziness may be sent home only to suffer a debilitating stroke. Poor hospital care, which includes misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis, could contribute to 180,000 deaths each year, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Recently, a John Hopkins team of researchers concluded that doctors often ...
Take time to learn to co-parent effectively with your former spouse
2014-04-09
Take time to learn to co-parent effectively with your former spouse
Article provided by Carlson, Carlson & Dunkelman, L.L.C.
Visit us at http://www.ccdlawyers.com
Have you and your significant other decided it is time to end your marriage? Are you feeling somewhat overwhelmed by what this decision entails and how it will affect your children? In such situations, when a couple decides to divorce, it can be difficult to adjust to the new parenting demands.
Consequently, when divorcing, it is wise to entrust the legal aspects of the split to a skilled attorney ...
Bad faith refusal to settle claims against insurers in Missouri
2014-04-09
Bad faith refusal to settle claims against insurers in Missouri
Article provided by Leritz, Plunkert & Bruning, PC
Visit us at http://www.leritzlaw.com
An insurance company operates in bad faith when it fails to pay a legitimate first party claim made by an insured person without a reasonable basis. Insurance companies can face liability beyond the limits of the insurance policies they issue if they operate in bad faith.
Vexatious refusal to pay
Missouri common law does not recognize a first party claim for bad faith, as many other states do. However, when ...
Responex is the New Trade Name of Genebis
2014-04-09
Genebis, a leading provider of marketing services and solutions for organizations, announced today the company will begin operating under a new trade name and will be known as Responex effective immediately. At the same time, the company unveiled a new identity and redesigned Web site, http://www.responex.com. The new site prominently features the company's focus on responsive website development, marketing campaign management, and marketing strategy development using a new express framework and new technologies. The company's ownership and staff have not changed.
President ...
NY Rock Band Divot Announce New EP And Tour Dates
2014-04-09
Hard rock trio Divot will release their new EP "To Shape The Mold" on May 13th through digital retailers worldwide. The self-produced EP was mixed by respected engineer Mike Ferretti (Sevendust, Zakk Wylde). Divot will tour the East Coast in support of the release, initial tour dates are listed below.
Listen to the first single "Downer" - https://soundcloud.com/airtimepr/divot-downer
Dates:
4/18 - The Lost Horizon - Syracuse, NY
5/10 - The Dock - Ithaca, NY
5/30 - FNA's - Waterloo, NY
5/31 - Buisch's Bullpen North - Watkins Glen, NY
http://www.Facebook.com/DivotOfficial
Contact:
Bob ...
Grand Pacific Resort Management Continues Growth Surge
2014-04-09
Grand Pacific Resort Management (GPRM) of Carlsbad, has added Meadow Lake Resort to its portfolio of quality timeshare resorts, bringing the number of resorts managed to 20. Meadow Lake is GPRM's first addition of 2014, adding to the four resorts GPRM welcomed into its family of managed resorts in 2013.
Meadow Lake, the premier Montana Golf and Ski Resort is located just minutes from Big Mountain at Whitefish, Glacier National Park and Flathead Lake. This 330-acre RCI Gold Crown resort features 114 timeshare condominiums, 24 hotel rooms, an on-site restaurant/bar, a ...