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Adoption & Fostering
Abstracts


Autumn 2005 - Vol 29 (3)

Editorial: Roger Bullock

Newspoints

Disabled children who need permanence: barriers to placement
Jennifer Cousins

Key words: adoption, disability, placement, barriers, fostering, matching

Disabled children wait longer than other children for permanent new families and some never achieve a family for life. In this timely analysis, Jennifer Cousins explores the barriers that make disabled children's pathway to a family so problematic. It is argued that only with this knowledge can the necessary changes be made on behalf of this vulnerable group of young people.

Over several months during 2003 and 2004 BAAF's Opening Doors Disability Project ran a series of workshops across England to explore this complex subject with practitioners and carers. This paper includes the many ideas that emanated from these workshops, plus research material and the author's own views. Problems and barriers emerged in the recruitment, assessment and support of families; in the profiling and placing of children; at management level in the training and development of staff; in departmental structures and in diminished resources. All pervasive is the negativity and discrimination which affects people with impairments. It is argued that everyone engaged in children's services and family placement has a responsibility to promote the interests of disabled children by tackling the barriers identified here. In so doing, the placement chances for all children will be enhanced.

Jennifer Cousins is Consultant, BAAF's Opening Doors disability project

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Processes and outputs of an adoption panel: a case study
Terence O'Sullivan

Key words: adoption panel, scrutiny process, adoption and looked after children

This article examines the processes and outputs of an adoption panel and is the second by Terence O'Sullivan to report on an observational case study. The research investigates how representative and participative panel members were, how attendee presence was structured, what the panel focused on and how conclusions were reached. The panel considered social work proposals in relation to looked after children whose permanence plan was adoption. A scrutiny process was observed that took the form of identifying issues, asking questions, being reassured (or not), coming to a conclusion and giving feedback. The importance of the panel's work stems from its scrutiny of social work proposals and the article suggests various ways in which this could be made more effective.

Terence O'Sullivan is Senior Lecturer in Social Work, Hull School of Health and Social Care, University of Lincoln

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Part-time fostering: recruiting and supporting carers for short-break schemes
June Statham and Margaret Greenfields

Key words: foster care, respite care, short break, recruitment and retention, support

Although most local authorities provide or commission home-based, short-break services to support families with a disabled child, such schemes have been much slower to develop as a form of support for families where children are in need for reasons other than disability. The authors draw on a study of barriers to the development of 'support care' schemes in England, focusing in particular on the motivation and experiences of those who undertake this part-time fostering work and the skills and support they require. Since childminders can now be registered to provide overnight care, and some already provide daytime care for children placed with them by social workers, the potential for childminders to expand their service into short-break care is also considered. The paper concludes that although local authorities have sometimes been reluctant to develop short-break schemes because they fear diverting potential carers from mainstream fostering, in practice such fears are not well founded. Support care schemes can offer a way for those who might be interested in fostering to 'dip a toe' in the water, as well as helping to retain existing foster carers who might otherwise leave the service. This kind of service also fits well with the current policy emphasis on early intervention to support children and families who are experiencing difficulties and on promoting flexibility in the social care workforce.

June Statham is Reader in Education and Family Support, Thomas Coram Research Unit, University of London

Margaret Greenfields is Research Associate in the same department

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Lesbian and gay foster care and adoption: a brief UK history
Stephen Hicks

Key words: lesbians, gay men, foster care, adoption, sexuality, social work

Stephen Hicks presents a history of foster care and adoption by lesbians and gay men in the UK since 1988. He reviews key research, policy, law and debates about lesbian and gay carers and discusses key changes and developments in this field of practice. The article discusses a number of common arguments that surface in debates about this topic, including the idea that the children of lesbians and gay men will suffer psychosocial damage or develop problematic gender and sexual identity. In addition, the author critiques the notion that children do best in 'natural' two-parent, heterosexual families and that lesbian or gay carers should not be considered or should be used only as a 'last resort'. Although the number of approved lesbian and gay carers has been increasing and there has been a range of positive changes in this field, it is argued that a series of homophobic ideas remain a key feature of this debate. The article asks how much things have changed since 1988 and what social work can do to contribute to an anti-homophobic practice.

Stephen Hicks is a Senior Lecturer in Community, Health Sciences & Social Care at the University of Salford. He is also a link foster carer and Chair of the Northern Support Group for lesbian and gay foster carers and adopters.

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The experience of being privately fostered
Edwina Peart

Key words: private fostering, transracial placement, African children, child care

This article provides information on a little known subject, private fostering. It builds on the work of Holman (1973, 2002) and Philpot (2001) who provide the only other studies of this type of care. The focus adopted represents a shift from the dominance of a professional perspective in these earlier studies. Within the current policy context, the study is timely as it explores both the benefits and dangers of this form of care. It also adds to the debate on transracial adoption

Edwina Peart is Research Officer, Thomas Coram Research Unit, University of London

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The impact of abuse and trauma on the developing child: an evaluation of a training programme for foster carers and supervising social workers
Jeanette Allen and Panos Vostanis

Key words: therapeutic fostering, foster care training, attachment difficulties, attachment theory, looked after children

The authors describe the set-up and preliminary evaluation of a seven-week training programme for foster carers and supervising social workers based on attachment theory. It has long been recognised that parenting children with complex and challenging needs in a family setting is extremely demanding, with research indicating that foster carers' lack of confidence in managing such demands is a significant factor in placement breakdown. This study suggests that attachment theory provides a useful model to help carers understand and respond to the complex difficulties presented by children with a history of abuse and trauma, and that the provision of a conceptual framework may be a significant factor in improving foster carers' confidence to manage the difficulties presented by the children in their care. The clinical implications of this evaluation are discussed.

Jeanette Allen is a clinical psychologist with Leicestershire Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service

Panos Vostanis is Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Leicester

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Work in progress: A childhood on paper: accessing records under the Data Protection Act 1998
Jim Goddard, Julia Feast and Derek Kirton

Legal notes: England and Wales
Deborah Cullen

Legal notes: Scotland
Alexandra Plumtree

Legal notes: Northern Ireland
Kerry O'Halloran

Health notes: Frequency of cardiovascular disease risk in adult foster care and prospective adopter applicants
Ellen Taylor, Irene Paphiti-Demetriou and Catherine M Hill

Book reviews

Abstracts

Diary

Index


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Adoption & Fostering

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