By Joan Hunt, Suzette Waterhouse and Eleanor Lutman
Price: £14.95
BAAF, June 2008
ISBN 978 1 905664 52 8
Kinship care is a fast developing field which is likely to receive greater attention following its promotion in the Care Matters White Paper. This timely study examines the medium term outcomes for children placed in kinship care through care proceedings. It provides invaluable information on the benefits and challenges of this form of care and what needs to be done if it is to be used effectively.
The study – part of the government–funded Quality Protects initiative – tracked a cohort of 113 children in England, removed from their parents' care because of child protection concerns, and placed with kin through the courts between 1995 and 2001. There was also a small comparison group of young children placed in non–kin care. Placements were followed up in 2004/5 and assessed in terms of whether they had lasted for as long as necessary; whether they had provided good quality and safe care; the quality of the relationship between the child and the carer; and how well the child was functioning. Case file data was collected on all placements supplemented, for the kin–placed children, by interviews with a sample of carers, social workers, children, young people and parents.
The research concludes that kinship care can be a positive option for many abused and neglected children but it is not straightforward and requires careful assessment and adequate support. To realise the full potential of this unique form of care requires clear policies at central and local government level, appropriate infrastructures and adequate resourcing.
This study will be essential reading for all those concerned with placement decisions within local authorities and the courts, as well as policy makers in local and central government. It will also be of interest to academics with an interest in child welfare, and organisations working with, or representing, children needing substitute care, their parents, and their carers.