Foster Care Adoptions Reach Record High in United States
A record number of children in foster care are being adopted, partially a reflection of the continuing toll of the opioid crisis but also of efforts in many states to promote adoptions.
In fiscal 2018, the latest year for which data is available, more than 63,000 children were adopted from foster care, up nearly a quarter from fiscal 2014. That number was an all-time high, according to the U.S. Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System.
The share of children leaving foster care for adoption increased, from 21% in fiscal year 2014 to more than 25% in 2018. Adoptive parents are most interested in babies and toddlers, and 50% of the foster care children who were adopted in fiscal 2018 were under age 5.
On the one hand, the increase in adoptions is good news, child welfare experts say. Children do best when they remain in a stable household, instead of being bounced from one foster family to another or placed in a group home. When it’s not safe for them to be with their biological parents, the next best option is a home with adoptive parents.
On the other hand, the spike in adoptions is another sign of the chaos wrought by the opioid crisis. In the past decade, thousands of kids whose parents are struggling with addiction to opioids or other drugs, or whose parents have died from overdoses, have been removed from their homes and placed in foster care, which has increased adoption numbers.
“If I could wave a magic wand and get rid of substance abuse, there wouldn’t be enough work,” said David Gooding, a judge overseeing child welfare cases in the 4th Circuit Court of Florida. “Parents come in using everything from methadone to heroin to methadone and heroin at the same time, to cocaine and marijuana.”
For the first time since fiscal 2012, the number of children in foster care in the United States declined slightly in 2018, to 437,000. That’s a 6% increase from the number of children in foster care in fiscal 2010, before the opioid crisis escalated.
But the increase over the past decade has been much more dramatic in the states hit hardest by the opioid epidemic.
In Ohio, for example, the number of children in foster care increased by nearly 32% between fiscal 2010 and 2018, to nearly 16,000, according to AFCARS data. During that same time, adoptions from foster care increased by 9%, to nearly 1,600.
Meanwhile, fewer children are being reunited with their parents and primary caretakers when they leave foster care.
In fiscal 2011, 52% of children leaving foster care – 126,000 – were reunited with their parents or primary caretakers, according to AFCARS data. With the opioid epidemic, that percentage has declined to 49% in fiscal 2018.
“Parents disappear, and we can’t find them,” said Gooding, the Florida judge. “Or sometimes a parent chooses a better future for their child by surrendering their parental rights.”
Whether they’re former foster parents or extended family members, adoptive parents need family preservation services, said Mary Boo, executive director of the North American Council on Adoptable Children, a St. Paul, Minnesota-based advocacy group.
Roughly 1% to 5% of adoptions fail, with those children ending up back in foster care, according to a 2012 report from the U.S. Children’s Bureau.
Kids in foster care typically have experienced serious abuse, neglect and trauma, which affect both brain development and their ability to have relationships with their new family, Boo said. And that often means different parenting techniques are needed. Adoptive parents need training to meet those needs, according to Boo.
For example, for children who were abandoned by their biological parents, a timeout can be traumatic, because they fear they’re being abandoned again, Boo said. Adoptive and foster parents need ongoing training to help them navigate the intricacies of parenting traumatized children, along with the help of peer support groups and mental health services to deal with the trauma.
“We want to make sure that states are thinking about family preservation also for adoptive families,” Boo said. “We know it’s best for kids to be in families – but in families that have the resources and knowledge to help them grow and thrive.”
This article was produced by Stateline, an initiative of the Pew Charitable Trusts. More stories from Stateline can be found at www.pewtrusts.org/stateline.
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