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Title: DEVELOPMENTAL SCREENING AND MONITORING OF CHILDREN IN FOSTER CARE:


1
DEVELOPMENTAL SCREENING AND MONITORING OF
CHILDREN IN FOSTER CARE
  • Challenges and Strategies
  • Megan Tardif Vanessa Lapointe
  • Sue Khazaie

2
Goals
  • Brief Clinical Snapshot of young children in care
  • Brief overview of findings and recommendations
    from the Fraser Region Developmental Screening
    Project for Young Children in Foster Care.
  • Review of issues that arise when considering
    systematic developmental screening and monitoring
    of children in foster care, such as selecting an
    appropriate screening measure deciding how this
    measure should be administered
  • Overview of models for implementation that are
    presented in the related literature with links
    drawn to national, provincial and local efforts.
  • Participants' discussion about the challenges,
    models, and directions for addressing the need to
    monitor the developmental vulnerability of
    children in foster care

3
Some statistics
  • Very little Canadian research on this population
  • Over 76,000 foster children in Canada
  • Approximately 500 000 foster children in USA,
    with 230 000 entering foster care every year
    (Antoine Fisher, 2006)
  • Young children are the largest group of children
    living in out-of-home care

4
Some statistics
  • Most common reasons for placement in care
  • Neglect (30-59)
  • Parental incapacity including substance abuse and
    mental illness (30-75)
  • Physical abuse (9-25)
  • Abandonment (9-23)
  • Sexual abuse (2-6)

5
Contributing Factors
Parental Challenges
Substance abuse Mental Illness Intellectual
Limitations Social isolation Domestic violence
Interactive Cycle
Child Factors
Environmental Stressors
Poverty Unemployment Poor nutrition Lack of
social supports Overcrowding
Difficult Temperament Poor Self-Regulation Behavio
ral issues Intellectual Developmental
Limitations
6
Issues predating placement in care
  • Prenatal history
  • Poor prenatal care
  • Prenatal exposure
  • Genetic conditions
  • Transmission of parental challenges
  • Developmental disabilities and other
    exceptionalities

7
Issues predating placement in care
  • Abuse and/or Neglect
  • Physical, emotional, sexual abuse victims more
    likely to receive mental health services than
    neglect victims where standard of care is not met
    despite the knowledge that neglect can be more
    detrimental to development (Pears Fisher, 2005)
  • Developmental outcomes highly impacted by
    maltreatment, including peer interaction,
    self-control, internalizing behaviors, and
    hyperactivity (Buehler et al., 2000 Veloz
    Fordham, 2005)
  • Children birth to 3 highest victimization rate of
    child maltreatment (US Department of Health and
    Human Services)

8
Issues predating placement in care
  • Placement in care of a relative
  • Continuation of kinship ties
  • Lack of significant relationship with child prior
    to child entering care
  • Preparedness to parent
  • Life stage
  • Pre-existing issues
  • Substance abuse
  • Parental substance abuse (biological parent) is
    one of the strongest predictors of foster care
    placement instability (5-9x) this instability
    exacerbates existing behavioral difficulties
    (Holland Gorey, 2004)

9
Issues predating placement in care
  • Experience of poor parental strategies
  • Deficient family management skills
  • Harsh and inconsistent discipline
  • Low levels of supervision and involvement in
    childs life
  • Lack of appropriate prosocial reinforcement
  • (Leslie et al., 2005)

10
Issues arising with placement in care
  • Loss/trauma
  • Birth parent(s)
  • Siblings (Leathers Addams, 2005)
  • Consideration of age at placement
  • Change in attachment classification (to secure)
    more likely and more quickly in younger children
    (Stovall-McClough Dozier, 2004)

11
Issues arising with placement in care
  • Frequent changes in care providers
  • of transitions directly impacts development
    (Pears Fisher, 2005)
  • Exacerbates existing social and emotional
    concerns (Newton et al., 2000)
  • most any child who has already experienced a
    number of lifespan traumas and then the loss of
    their family of origin will only be further
    harmed by going through a series of developed and
    then lost relationships with foster parents and
    siblings. (p. 117-188, Holland Gorey, 2004)

12
Issues arising with placement in care
  • Quality of care
  • Discontinuity in or lack of service provision
    (Pasztor et al., 2006)
  • Physician
  • Early Intervention Services
  • Education
  • As childrens skills are tied to their
    environment, a move to foster care can therefore
    suppress child performance during a screening
  • We may initially see a child experiencing delays
    who then catches up with time in care

13
Clinical Snapshot
  • Children in foster care have 3 to 7 times as many
    health conditions, emotional problems and
    developmental delays
  • Broken down by age, one American study found that
    children in foster care have the following
    incidences of developmental or emotional problems
  • 0 - 12 months 76
  • 1 3 years, 83
  • 3 - 5 years, 92

14
Clinical Snapshot Medical Issues
  • Among the most medically fragile children
  • Problems begin prenatally
  • Prenatal exposure maternal substance use
    poverty
  • 82 of children in care (US) had at least one
    chronic medical condition 29 had 3 or more
  • Much higher incidence of problems associated with
    prenatal exposure for the population of children
    in foster care

15
Clinical Snapshot Medical Issues
  • 40 are born prematurely or have low birth weight
  • Congenital infection rates are higher (HIV)
  • Shaken baby syndrome and physical abuse
  • Failure to thrive
  • Most common medical conditions include asthma,
    anemia, vision and hearing problems, and
    hyperphagia

16
Clinical Snapshot Mental Health Issues
  • While up to 50 of children in one study
    reportedly had mental health needs, very few of
    them actually accessed the appropriate services
    due to lack of identification and/or barriers to
    service accessibility within the system (Leslie
    at al, 2000)
  • Other studies place the incidence of clinically
    diagnosable mental health issues for children in
    foster care at up to 90

17
Clinical Snapshot Mental Health Issues
  • Placement in foster care often follows an
    experience of profound neglect, severe or
    prolonged abuse, exposure to violence, or
    grossly disturbed or noncontingent input from a
    psychiatrically impaired or substance abusing
    parent. Many children have had multiple
    caregivers, either before or while in foster
    care. In the youngest cohort of children entering
    foster care, these adverse events occur during
    the most formative time for the development of
    self-regulation and attachment, the primary
    developmental task of infancy and early
    childhood. (Vig et al., 2005)

18
Clinical Snapshot Mental Health Issues
  • Placement in foster care associated with higher
    rates of behavior issues/disorders (Flynn Biro,
    1998)
  • Most common root cause of mental health problems
    for children in foster care is attachment
    disorders
  • These are children who have often endured
    multiple losses of their primary attachment
    figure(s)

19
Clinical Snapshot Mental Health Issues
  • Regulatory disorders are also very common
  • inability to establish regular patterns in sleep
    or eating, and/or to modulate emotion, attention,
    activity level, or aggression.
  • Result in significant behavioral issues

20
Clinical Snapshot Mental Health Issues
  • Higher incidence of sleep disorders
  • Higher incidence of PTSD
  • Expect hyperarousal, hypervigilance, difficulty
    concentrating, developmental regression
  • Often over diagnosed as having ADHD when the real
    problem is attachment, trauma or regulatory based.

21
Clinical Snapshot Mental Health Issues
  • Exposure to higher levels of cortisol in
    extremely critical period of brain development
  • Higher levels of cortisol created by many of the
    issues that predate placement in care and arise
    with placement in care (neglect, maltreatment,
    attachment, loss, trauma, etc.)
  • More recently, evidence that certain therapeutic
    interventions can actually counteract the effects
    of this early exposure to higher than normal
    levels of cortisol (e.g. Fisher et al., 2007 see
    also Gunnar, M. and colleagues)

22
Clinical Snapshot Mental Health Issues
  • Mental health services are typically more
    difficult to access than physical health services
    (Pasztor et al., 2006)

23
CLINICAL SNAPSHOT DEVELOPMENTAL CHALLENGES
  • Decreased levels of educational success
  • 41 repeat grade
  • 43 in Special Education (3-4x)
  • Frequent changes in educational setting (2x)
  • (Flynn Biro, 1998)

24
CLINICAL SNAPSHOT DEVELOPMENTAL CHALLENGES
  • Prevalence of developmental delay 13-80 compared
    to 4-10 in general population (Halfon et al.,
    1995 Horowitz, Simms Farrington, 1994 Leslie
    et al., 2002)
  • Decreased language development across all ages
    but worsens as as enter preschool years (up to
    63 will have delays) (Halfon et al, 1995 Silver
    et al, 1999)
  • 63 cognitive delays and 46 motor delays (Leslie
    et al, 2002)

25
Clinical Snapshot
  • Early Interventionist Perspective
  • Often start with regulation difficulties
    possibly related to prenatal factors
  • Difficulty with self-soothing
  • More likely to have extreme and sudden changes in
    their emotional state ( unexplained crying,
    tantrums)
  • Catch up may happen with developmental delays but
    social and emotional difficulties often last

26
Developmental Screening Project Resource Group
  • Dana Brynelsen Provincial Advisor, Infant
    Development Program
  • Lorraine Aitken Provincial Advisor, Supported
    Child Dev. Program
  • Janet Donald Office of the Child and Youth
    Officer
  • Christine Scott Director, Simon Fraser Society
    for Community Living
  •  
  • MCFD Staff
  • Bruce McNeill Director of Child Welfare
  • Deputy Director of Adoption
  • Susan Waldron Manager of Practice Development
  • Pat Scriven Adoption Consultant
  • Carol Arkinstall Guardianship Consultant
  • Patricia Ghobrial Guardianship Consultant
  • Diane Swansburg Residential Resources Consultant
  • Sue Khazaie Early Development Consultant

27
Fraser Region Developmental Screening Project for
Young Children in Foster Care
  • Targeted children-in-care in the Fraser Region in
    March 2005
  • not recently screened not currently receiving
    services
  • Foster/birth parents completed developmental
    screening inventories
  • Ages and Stages Questionnaire (ASQ)
  • Ages and Stages Questionnaire Socioemotional
    (ASQSE)
  • Parent administered
  • Valid and reliable estimates of childrens
    developmental status
  • Commonly used to monitor high-risk populations
  • Several domains
  • ASQ fine motor, gross motor, communication,
    problem solving, personal-social
  • ASQSE Self-regulation, compliance,
    communication, adaptive functioning, autonomy,
    affect, and interaction with people)

28
FRASER REGION DEVELOPMENTAL SCREENING PROJECT FOR
YOUNG CHILDREN IN FOSTER CARE
  • Screening results computed
  • Follow-up visit from experienced interventionist
  • Referrals for further assessment
  • Referrals for developmental supports

29
Target Sample
Children in Foster Care in Fraser Region, March
2005 N 454
30
Target SampleData Collection Challenges
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31
Results
32
Intensity of Risk
33
Domain of Risk
34
Follow-up and home visits
  • Foster parents with children receiving at-risk
    scores were contacted within 4 weeks
  • Follow-up visit arranged
  • 55 children flagged for follow-up
  • 19 home visits completed
  • 3 children with borderline scores had notable
    improvement so no home visit required
  • 26 already receiving services when contacted for
    home visit
  • 7 no longer in care, moved, over age 5,no longer
    concerns/received services

35
Follow-up and home visits
  • Experienced early interventionist that worked in
    the geographical area where flagged foster child
    resided visited the involved family
  • Reviewed screening results
  • Established concerns
  • Discussed/facilitated appropriate referrals
  • Provided suggestions to encourage further
    development in at-risk areas
  • Intervention plan devised, completed and returned
    to social worker

36
Follow-up and home visits
  • 19 home visits completed
  • 14 children for whom referrals for developmental
    supports were made or recommended
  • These 14 children had 34 referrals for early
    development services/supports made and an
    additional 10 recommendations for services and
    supports
  • 4 additional families received telephone
    consultation

37
Project Recommendations
  • Systematic developmental screening and
    surveillance program to be developed and
    implemented for all young children in foster care
  • Appropriate tool
  • Face-to-face
  • Foster parent training to include information
    about screening, referral and community services
  • Time lines for screening and referral
  • Immediate and regular involvement with a
    pediatrician

38
Project Recommendations
  1. Once identified, timely early intervention
    services and therapy without wait times for
    children in care. These services and supports
    should be portable with the child.

39
Project Recommendations
  • Information should be tracked and readily
    available regarding a childs
  • Developmental status
  • Services and supports involved
  • Foster parent information
  • Guardianship and resource worker information

40
Recommendations from Literature
  • The American Academy of Pediatrics and the Child
    Welfare League of America have published
    guidelines relevant to the health supervision of
    children in care. Among these are
  • Initial medical visit within 24 hours of
    placement
  • A comprehensive follow-up visit within 30 days
    of placement
  • Routine screening for development, mental health,
    dental health and sexually transmitted infections
  • In Canada, there remains no practice guidelines
    specifically designed to meet the health care
    needs of children and youth in foster care.
    (Paediatrics Child Health, 2008)

41
Fraser Region Early Childhood Screening Program
Year 1 Children in Care
  • Partnership between Fraser Health and Ministry of
    Children and Family Development
  • Fraser Health started with the dollars for vision
    screening program for 3 year olds
  • Linked this to hearing, dental and developmental
    screening at 18 months and 3 years
  • Year 1 are piloting this program for children in
    foster care
  • In the first 4 months, there have been 40
    children screened in the Region
  • Overall 69 of children required referral for
    further evaluation in at least one facet of the
    screening
  • (Early Childhood Screening Program May 2008)

42
Every Child MattersLooked After Children - UK
  • Developed after the 2003 Victoria Climbié inquiry
  • 108 recommendations were made by Lord Laming

43
Every Child MattersLooked After Children - UK
  • At the heart of the recommendations was
    interagency coordination and communication
  • Care for children in care is managed within each
    Primary Care Trust (PCT)
  • The Children Act 2004 gives a particular role to
    Local Authorities in setting up the arrangements
    to secure co-operation among local partners, such
    as Primary Care Trusts, Youth Offending Teams,
    the Police Service, District Councils and others
  • Children are systematically tracked, screened and
    monitored over time
  • Thanks to Elaine Offler, CHN Maple Ridge and Pam
    Munro, RN, BScN, MSN Clinical Nurse Specialist
    Community Child and Youth Health Promotion and
    Prevention Fraser Health
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