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Article
Adoption Discontinuity in Intensive Out-of-Home Care Settings
Adoption Quarterly
  • JaeRan Kim, University of Washington Tacoma
  • Kristine Piescher
  • Traci LaLiberte
Publication Date
10-2-2019
Document Type
Article
Abstract

This study sought to understand previous adoption experiences of youth placed in residential, group, and treatment foster care settings. A secondary analysis of an existing point-in-time prevalence study of 869 youth in 38 private residential, group home, and treatment foster care facilities were conducted. Gender, race, number of placements, and having a developmental disability were variables that significantly explained adoption disruption while placement histories and race/ethnicity significantly explained adoption dissolutions. Findings suggest the need for ongoing worker, provider and caregiver training and the importance of understanding a youth’s adoption history.

DOI
10.1080/10926755.2019.1675838
Publisher Policy
Pre-print, post-print
Citation Information
Kim, J., Piescher, K., & LaLiberte, T. (2019). Adoption Discontinuity in Intensive Out-of-Home Care Settings. Adoption Quarterly, 22(4), 307–329. https://doi.org/10.1080/10926755.2019.1675838