24-month update on the impact of roundtables on permanency for youth in foster care |
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Authors: | Cynthia W. Davis Kirk O'Brien Carla S. Rogg Linda Jewell Morgan Catherine Roller White Millicent Houston |
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Affiliation: | 1. Care Solutions, Inc., United States;2. Research Services, Casey Family Programs, United States;3. Strategic Consulting, Casey Family Programs, United States;4. Georgia Division of Family and Children Services, United States |
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Abstract: | Although the number of children in foster care has decreased in recent years (U.S. DHHS, 2012), additional strategies are needed to help youth achieve legal permanency before they age out of foster care. One such strategy is the permanency roundtable, which convenes a team of professionals to facilitate the permanency planning process by identifying realistic solutions to permanency obstacles for youth. Nearly 500 youth went through the initial permanency roundtable process in Georgia in 2009. Just over half were male (57%) and over nine in ten (92%) were African American. At the start of the roundtables, the median age was 13, and the median length of stay in foster care was 52 months. Two years after their roundtable, 50% of the nearly 500 children had achieved legal permanency. Analyses, presented separately for three age groups (0–6, 7–12, and 13–18), examine outcomes and predictors of legal permanency. Recommendations, limitations, and areas for future research are discussed. |
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