PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Subsidies change incentives for adoption of foster children: Study

2012-09-08
(Press-News.org) The structure of a federal program that provides monthly subsidies to promote the adoptions of special needs children in foster care may actually be delaying some adoptions, according to a new study by University of Notre Dame economist Kasey Buckles.

The Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act (AACWA), passed in 1980, provides an average of $670 per month for foster parents of special needs children, while adoptive parents of special needs children receive an average of $571 per month. "Special needs" refers to foster children who may be harder to place in permanent adoptive homes because of age, race, or mental or physical disability.

Forthcoming in the Journal of Human Resources, Buckles' study shows that the number of adoptions increases when children become eligible for an adoption subsidy, and most of the increase is from adoptions by foster parents. However, the age of subsidy eligibility for children varies by state since states can choose how they define a special needs child. As a result, children in some states become subsidy eligible at age 2, while others are not eligible until age 12.

"A foster parent who adopts a child who is not yet eligible for the adoption subsidy forfeits $670 per month, on average. This creates an incentive for foster parents to wait until their foster child is eligible by age to formally adopt."

The vast majority of foster children come from disadvantaged backgrounds, and formalized adoption can have an emotionally stabilizing effect on these children.

"If the foster parents who are waiting to adopt could be granted an adoption subsidy sooner, the child could be moved into a stable adoptive relationship more quickly. This would have the added benefit of saving money, since adoption subsidies are always less than what the state spends to support a child in foster care."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Turf study to monitor runoff, establish fertilizer management practices

2012-09-08
COLLEGE STATION – Improperly applied fertilizer to newly placed sod may result in nutrient runoff into the water supply, but just when is the best time to apply fertilizer and what kind is the best for new turf? Aiming to answer those questions is a team of scientists from Texas A&M AgriLife Research: Dr. Jacqui Aitkenhead-Peterson, assistant professor of urban nutrient and water management; Dr. Ben Wherley, assistant professor of turfgrass science and ecology; Dr. Richard White, professor of turfgrass physiology and management; and Jim Thomas, senior research associate, ...

Tension on gut muscles induces cell invasion in zebrafish intestine, mimicking cancer metastasis

Tension on gut muscles induces cell invasion in zebrafish intestine, mimicking cancer metastasis
2012-09-08
VIDEO: The movie shows a segment of the mutant intestine (3.5 day old fish, lateral view of the intestine). The time lapse images were taken over about six to eight hours.... Click here for more information. PHILADELPHIA — The stiffness of breast tissue is increasingly recognized as an important factor explaining the onset of breast cancer. Stiffening induces molecular changes that promote cancerous behavior in cells. Bioengineering studies have found that breast cancer ...

NASA's Global Hawk Mission Begins with Flight to Hurricane Leslie

NASAs Global Hawk Mission Begins with Flight to Hurricane Leslie
2012-09-08
NASA has begun its latest hurricane science field campaign by flying an unmanned Global Hawk aircraft over Hurricane Leslie in the Atlantic Ocean during a day-long flight from California to Virginia. With the Hurricane and Severe Storm Sentinel (HS3) mission, NASA for the first time will be flying Global Hawks from the U.S. East Coast. The Global Hawk took off from NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., Thursday and landed at the agency's Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Va., today at 11:37 a.m. EDT after spending 10 hours collecting ...

Treatment with fungi makes a modern violin sound like a Stradiavarius

2012-09-08
A good violin depends not only on the expertise of the violin maker, but also on the quality of the wood that is used. The Swiss wood researcher Professor Francis W. M. R. Schwarze (Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, St. Gallen, Switzerland) has succeeded in modifying the wood for a violin through treatment with special fungi. This treatment alters the acoustic properties of the instrument, making it sound indistinguishably similar to a Stradivarius. In his dinner talk at the 1st ECRC "Franz-Volhard" Symposium of the Max Delbrück Center ...

Health-care costs at end of life exceed total assets for 25 percent of Medicare population

2012-09-08
As many as a quarter of Medicare recipients spend more than the total value of their assets on out-of-pocket health care expenses during the last five years of their lives, according to researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. They found that 43 percent of Medicare recipients spend more than their total assets minus the value of their primary residences. The findings appear online in the current issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine. The amount of spending varied with the patient's illness. Those with dementia or Alzheimer's disease spent the most for ...

On 9/13, Lifestyle and Entertainment Magazine Nine Thirteen Goes Live

2012-09-08
Set to officially launch its website at the apex of Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week, NINE THIRTEEN is a refreshingly bold, new magazine poised to take the lifestyle and entertainment worlds by storm Thursday, September 13th. The well-known president, founder and Editor-In-Chief of NINE THIRTEEN, Catrina Cha'Ron, will be pulling out all the stops for this can't be missed media frenzy and fashionable event. With over 20 years of experience in top level management which includes launching mayoral initiatives and philanthropic service, for Cha'Ron NINE THIRTEEN is a dream realized. ...

Lilburn Back Pain Chiropractor, Dr. Matthew Loop, Offers Locals Fast and Safe Relief

2012-09-08
Dr. Matthew Loop, who created and runs All-Pro Chiropractic and Pain Specialists helps several patients on a daily basis who suffer from back pain. Back pain is one of the most common ailments amongst adults, affecting hundreds of thousands each year. It can be related to muscle problems, a herniated disc or a simple misalignment of the spine. Dr. Loop observes, "Most back pain typically originates from a particular mechanical issue, as when someone lifts a heavy box improperly or someone sits for an extended period of time on a poorly designed chair or simply using ...

YR Building Services Introduces Newly Designed Website

2012-09-08
YR Building Services, a premier commercial cleaning company serving the Lower Mainland and beyond, have released a new website design (http://www.yrbuildingservices.com/) to better cater to and communicate with the public. The company is well known for its comprehensive building maintenance, high quality janitorial cleaning services, experienced personnel and customer satisfaction. Their newly designed website offers a detailed list and explanation of their _a href="http://www.yrbuildingservices.com"_commercial cleaning services_/a_, which can be customized ...

SoleraTec Introduces Phoenix Thunderbird Video Surveillance Appliance Family

2012-09-08
SoleraTec LLC, a provider of innovative video lifecycle management and storage products, introduces the new Phoenix Thunderbird video surveillance appliance. Built upon the Sans Digital brand of storage hardware, the new SoleraTec Phoenix Thunderbird family of video surveillance appliances delivers a professional-grade surveillance video management solution in an all-in-one appliance, also known as a network video recorder or NVR. This new SoleraTec Phoenix Thunderbird video surveillance appliance provides a cost-effective, scalable solution for small and medium sized ...

Generation-e Wins Two National Accolades From Microsoft

2012-09-08
Today Generation-e proudly announces that it has won two MAPA 2012 Microsoft Partner of the Year Awards, one for Health Partner of the Year and one for Communications Partner of the Year. Emerging as the best of the best from a national field of Microsoft partners, Generation-e has been twice crowned for delivering market-leading customer solutions based on Microsoft Lync technology over the last year. "These awards mark the culmination of four years of consistent effort by our team. We couldn't be happier to have our great work publicly acknowledged by Microsoft ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New post-hoc analysis shows patients whose clinicians had access to GeneSight results for depression treatment are more likely to feel better sooner

First transplant in pigs of modified porcine kidneys with human renal organoids

Reinforcement learning and blockchain: new strategies to secure the Internet of Medical Things

Autograph: A higher-accuracy and faster framework for compute-intensive programs

Expansion microscopy helps chart the planktonic universe

Small bat hunts like lions – only better

As Medicaid work requirements loom, U-M study finds links between coverage, better health and higher employment

Manifestations of structural racism and inequities in cardiovascular health across US neighborhoods

Prescribing trends of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists for type 2 diabetes or obesity

Continuous glucose monitoring frequency and glycemic control in people with type 2 diabetes

Bimodal tactile tomography with bayesian sequential palpation for intracavitary microstructure profiling and segmentation

IEEE study reviews novel photonics breakthroughs of 2024

New method for intentional control of bionic prostheses

Obesity treatment risks becoming a ‘two-tier system’, researchers warn

Researchers discuss gaps, obstacles and solutions for contraception

Disrupted connectivity of the brainstem ascending reticular activating system nuclei-left parahippocampal gyrus could reveal mechanisms of delirium following basal ganglia intracerebral hemorrhage

Federated metadata-constrained iRadonMAP framework with mutual learning for all-in-one computed tomography imaging

‘Frazzled’ fruit flies help unravel how neural circuits stay wired

Improving care for life-threatening blood clots

Yonsei University develops a new era of high-voltage solid-state batteries

Underweight and unbalanced: Gut microbial diversity in underweight Japanese women

Astringent, sharper mind: Flavanols trigger brain activity for memory and stress response

New editorial urges clinicians to address sex-based disparities in sepsis treatment

Researchers at MIT develop new nanoparticles that stimulate the immune system to attack ovarian tumors

Opening the door to a vaccine for multiple childhood infections

New clue to ALS and FTD: Faulty protein disrupts brain’s ‘brake’ system

Detailed map of US air-conditioning usage shows who can beat the heat — and who can’t

An electronic fiber for stretchable sensing

New image captures spooky bat signal in the sky

Cobalt single atom-phosphate functionalized reduced graphene oxide/perylenetetracarboxylic acid nanosheet heterojunctions for efficiently photocatalytic H2O2 production

[Press-News.org] Subsidies change incentives for adoption of foster children: Study