Post Adoption Service Need and Use as Predictors of Adoption Dissolution: Findings From the 2012 National Adoptive Families Study |
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Authors: | Robin M. Hartinger-Saunders Alex Trouteaud Jodien Matos Johnson |
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Affiliation: | 1. Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA;2. The Harold and Kayrita Anderson Family Foundation, Atlanta, Georgia, USA |
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Abstract: | Data from the 2012 National Adoptive Families Study (NAFS) were used to examine the relationships between adoptive parents' need for and utilization of post-adoption services and adoption dissolution. NAFS was an online survey administered to adoptive parents (N = 437) who had adopted a child from the United States foster care system. The study found that needing and accessing post-adoption services predicted 26% of the variance in dissolution. Substance abuse treatment, educational advocacy, and parent support groups were the only significant predictors of adoption dissolution. Both needing and accessing substance abuse treatment increased the likelihood of adoption dissolution. Needing educational advocacy increased the likelihood of dissolution, but actually accessing it decreased the likelihood of dissolution. Accessing parent support groups similarly decreased the likelihood of dissolution. Policy and practice implications of the findings are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Post-adoption services need access dissolution |
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