7 research outputs found
Underserved Adoptive Families: Disparities in Postadoption Access to Information, Resources, and Services
Parents who adopt children from the U.S. foster care system typically do so with assurances from the state that postadoption services will be accessible by the family, if needed, after the adoption is finalized. From the stateās perspective, the foremost purpose of these services is to ensure that the family remains intact, thereby avoiding adoption dissolutionāa traumatic and costly outcome whereby the child is returned to state custody. This study looks specifically at underserved adoptive familiesāthose who report needing specific services after adoption finalization, yet who are then unable to access these needed services through the state because of various barriers. Data for the study came from the 2012 U.S. National Adoptive Families Study, an online survey of adoptive parents (N=437) who have adopted at least 1 child from the U.S. foster care system. The data show that specific demographic groups are disproportionately represented among underserved adoptive families, and that certain critically needed postadoption services are rarely rendered by the state. The results also suggest that particular state practices and policies systematically lead to higher rates of underserved adoptive families