Title: Listening to Parents
1Listening to Parents Understanding Barriers to
Adoption
A Presentation by Jeff Katz, M.S.W., MPA
2Background
- Practice, not academic
- The Funnel- many prospective parents call, few
actually adopt - Two Questions
- How Many People Start the Process?
- Why do so Many People Drop Out?
3Study methods
- AFCARS analysis
- National survey of adoption managers
- Attrition of applicants
- State policies and practices
- Case record abstraction
- Case studies
- Prospective adoptive parents (Not yet trained, in
training, waiting to be matched - Adoption workers and administrators
4Significant state variation in use of general
applicants
5National survey findings The funnel
240,000 Requests
36,000 Home Studies (15) 19,000 Approved and
waiting 8,700 Placed (3.6)
6Recruitment How people first hear about adoption
- Most have personal connection
- Wide variety of electronic and print media
- Motivation both parent-centered and
child-centered - Many misconceptions about process
- Most have also considered private, international
adoption - Lack of resources constrain recruitment efforts
7Screening vs. Recruitment? The first call
- Sites vary in emphasis placed
- First call laden with emotions
- Difficulty reaching right staff
- Strong personal connection helpful
- Emotions make communicating accurate information
difficult
8Application and orientation process
- Like first call, process varies by site
- San Jose Community education approach
- Massachusetts Screen out unlikely candidates,
complete initial visits - Miami Additional screening (fingerprinting),
completion of application - Common complaint too negative
- Legal-risk and fost-adopt encouraged,
misunderstood
9Training
- Not easy, but most have positive experience
- Complaints
- Focused too much on difficulties of children
- Information on services/supports too late
- Not enough on adoption process, how to deal with
birth parents post-adoption - Feeling they are being judged
- Accommodating different learning styles difficult
- Benefits of training foster and adoptive parent
together
10The home study process
- Differences in timing and intensity
- Complex relationship between worker and family
- How states handle families unlikely to have child
placed with them - Reasons for not approving home
- Parents unclear about approval process, purpose
11Matching and placement
- Different methods for applicants to learn about
adoptable children - Frustration over perceived secrecy of process
- Very subjective process
- Impact of family structure
- Assumptions about ability to care for certain
children - Transracial, trans-cultural placements
- Applicants often change their minds about types
of children they will adopt
12Case record abstraction Factors predicting
success
13Conclusions
- There is a very steep funnel from the initial
call through adoption. Few who request
information end up adopting a foster child, yet
great potential in pool of general applicants - Recruitment of general applicants varies
considerably across states, likelihood of success
similarly varies - Need for making system more accessible, uncertain
how many people drop out due to negative initial
response
14Conclusions
- Need to understand, and respond to emotional
needs of applicants - First call is critical
- Balancing screening vs. recruitment at different
stages in process - More information needed about process at each
step - Too focused on negatives, need more and earlier
information on supports
15Practice recommendations
- Recruitment
- More personalized
- Easier process
- Anyone can adopt
- Free, about children not money
- Screening
- Separate as much as possible from recruitment,
initial response - Early stages should focus on recruitment, later
stages on screening - Let information be screening tool, allow people
to self-select out of the process - Treat first call as counseling
16Practice recommendations
- Focus on retention
- Improve communication
- Identify barriers, make the process easier (e.g.,
single point of contact, computerize paperwork) - Be less negative, more supportive while providing
the same information - Listen to Parents
- Focus Groups
- Ombudsman
- Surveys
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