Achieving permanency for youth in foster care: assessing and strengthening emotional security |
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Authors: | Lauren Frey,Gretta Cushing&dagger ,Madelyn Freundlich&Dagger , Eliot Brenner§ |
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Affiliation: | Project Director of Permanency Services, Casey Family Services,;Senior Research Associate, Casey Family Services,;Consultant, Excal Consulting Partners LLC, and;Deputy Executive Director, Casey Family Services, New Haven, CT, USA |
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Abstract: | For some youth in foster care, the closest family or family‐like relationships are with the foster parents with whom they have lived for extended periods of time. Nonetheless, child welfare agencies often do not explore these relationships and the potential they may hold for youth for legal permanence through adoption or guardianship. Recognizing that social workers often lack resources to help them initiate permanency conversations, Casey Family Services, a direct service child welfare agency in the USA, developed a tool that social workers can use to explore youth's sense of emotional security with their foster parents and foster parents' sense of claiming and attachment with youth in their care. The research literature that suggests that emotional security is a critical component of successful permanence provided the foundation for the development of the Belonging and Emotional Security Tool (BEST). When used with youth and foster parents, the BEST was found to advance meaningful permanency conversations. The authors provide case examples of its use and discuss future directions for using the BEST and broadening its application. |
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Keywords: | emotional security foster care permanency |
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