Communicative Openness About Adoption and Interest in Contact in a Sample of Domestic and Intercountry Adolescent Adoptees |
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Authors: | Amanda Hawkins Celia Beckett Michael Rutter Jenny Castle Christine Groothues Jana Kreppner |
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Affiliation: | 1. Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Centre , Institute of Psychiatry , King's College , London , UK;2. Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Centre , Institute of Psychiatry , King's College , London , UK;3. PACT (Parents and Children Together) , Reading , UK |
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Abstract: | Adolescent intercountry (n = 122) and domestic (n = 40) adoptees and their adoptive parents were asked about their views on communicative openness. The adoptees were also asked for their thoughts on birth parents and contact. A modest association between communicative openness and feelings about adoptive status and self-esteem was found. Girls were more interested in many aspects of their adoptions than boys. Compared with the situation at 11 years of age, there was greater parent-child agreement on whether the child had difficulties talking about adoption. Nevertheless, at age 15, children were still nearly twice as likely to report difficulties talking about adoption issues than their adoptive parents realized. At the age of 15, the majority of the adoptees expressed a desire for contact with birth relatives, but this was a reduction from the numbers at age 11. They also reported finding it easier to talk about adoption issues than they did at the age of 11. The implications for policy and practice are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Communicative openness adoption intercountry adoption contact |
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