22 Facts About Foster care

1.

Foster care is correlated with a range of negative outcomes compared to the general population.

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2.

Children in foster care have a high rate of ill health, particularly psychiatric conditions such as anxiety, depression, and eating disorders.

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3.

Foster care had its early stages in South Australia in 1867 and stretched to the second half of the 19th century.

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4.

Around 1895 the foster care program became more like the system used in the United States because the Tokyo Metropolitan Police sent children to a hospital where they would be "settled".

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5.

Foster care did this to save them from "a lifetime of suffering" Foster care sent these children to families by train, which gave the name The Orphan Train Movement.

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6.

Family-based foster care is generally preferred to other forms of out of home care.

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7.

Foster care is intended to be a short-term solution until a permanent placement can be made.

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8.

However, if the parents are unable or unwilling to Foster care for the child, or if the child is an orphan, then the first choice of adoptive parents is a relative such as an aunt, uncle or grandparent, known as kinship Foster care.

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9.

In 2012, a quarter of all children in formal foster care were placed with relatives instead of being placed into the system.

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10.

Higher prevalence of physical, psychological, cognitive and epigenetic disorders for children in foster care has been established in studies in various countries.

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11.

Children in foster care have a higher probability of having attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and deficits in executive functioning, anxiety as well as other developmental problems.

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12.

Foster care children have elevated levels of cortisol, a stress hormone, in comparison to children raised by their biological parents.

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13.

Children in foster care have a higher incidence of posttraumatic stress disorder .

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14.

Foster care children are at increased risk for a variety of eating disorders in comparison to the general population.

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15.

Individuals with a history of foster care tend to become homeless at an earlier age than those who were not in foster care.

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16.

Children in foster care have an overall higher mortality rate than children in the general population.

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17.

Studies have revealed that youth in foster care covered by Medicaid insurance receive psychotropic medication at a rate that was 3 times higher than that of Medicaid-insured youth who qualify by low family income.

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18.

The study showed that youth in foster care are frequently treated with concomitant psychotropic medication, for which sufficient evidence regarding safety and effectiveness is not available.

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19.

Foster care adoption is a type of domestic adoption where the child is initially placed into a foster care system and is subsequently placed for adoption.

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20.

However, youth aging out of foster care have indicated that these programs are failing to fully address the needs of young adults without familial assistance.

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21.

Hatcher's scholarship has addressed the conflicts between state agencies' revenue maximization strategies and the agencies' core missions to serve low-income children and families—including the practice of state foster care agencies converting foster children's Social Security benefits into state revenue, Medicaid maximization and diversion practices, welfare cost recovery policies in the TANF program, and foster care cost recovery through child support enforcement.

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22.

Foster care's work focuses on improving outcomes for children in foster care by empowering their parents and strengthening decision-making processes in juvenile courts.

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