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Exploring spirituality among youth in foster care: findings from the Casey Field Office Mental Health Study
Authors:Lovie J Jackson  Catherine Roller White†  Kirk O'Brien†  Paul DiLorenzo†  Ernie Cathcart†  Mary Wolf†  Delilah Bruskas‡  Peter J Pecora†  §  Vivian Nix-Early¶  Jorge Cabrera†
Institution:Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, Pittsburgh, PA,;Casey Family Programs, Seattle, WA,;Pacific Northwest Alumni of Foster Care, Tacoma, WA,;University of Washington School of Social Work, Seattle, WA, and;Eastern University School for Social Change, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract:This study examined spiritual coping mechanisms, beliefs about spirituality and participation in spiritual activities and in other positive activities among adolescents in foster care. A multidimensional measure of spirituality was developed for face-to-face interviews with 188 youth (ages 14–17) from diverse racial/ethnic backgrounds in the United States. Findings revealed 95% of youth believe in God, over 70% believe God is 'creator' and God is 'love', and 79% considered prayer a spiritual practice. Most youth said love and forgiveness help them heal. Two-thirds (67%) reported responding to 'bad or tragic things happening' by spending time alone, and over half responded by praying (59%) or sharing the problem with someone else (56%). Youth's top three spiritual goals were to follow God's plan for them, become a better person, and know their purpose in life. Based on the value youth ascribed to spiritual coping mechanisms, recommendations for policy and practice focus on the integration of spirituality into practice and caregiving for youth in foster care.
Keywords:adolescence  child welfare  foster care  foster care (family)  prevention
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