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Infants who stay in foster care: child characteristics and permanency outcomes of legally free children first placed as infants
Authors:Kemp  & Bodonyi
Institution:Assistant Professor, University of Washington School of Social Work, Seattle, USA,;Research Associate, University of Washington School of Social Work, Seattle, USA
Abstract:Despite growing concern in the United States about the number of children who are entering child welfare care as infants, little empirical attention has been given to the sizable group of these children who are not reunified with their biological families and who then remain in care for long periods. This study examined length of stay and permanency outcomes for 458 legally free children who initially entered out-of-home care as infants. Using a Cox proportional-hazards event history model, the study also explored the effects of race/ethnicity and gender on the likelihood of these children achieving a permanent placement (legalized adoption or guardianship) within a reasonable period of time. African–American children and boys were found to be significantly less likely to achieve permanence than Caucasian children or girls. Across all groups of children in the sample, however, long stays in care were the norm. These findings suggest the need for flexible approaches to permanency, for efforts to better differentiate among infants in care, and for attention to children's long-term developmental needs as well as to strategies that better assure placement stability.
Keywords:adoption  child welfare  foster care  infants  permanency planning
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