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Re: DRG's and Child Welfare
Did your study include children who were in kinship care? Are any of
the results broken down by non-relative foster care and kinship care?
If so, I would be interested in any publications you have based on this
research.
Thank you!
Amy Gordon
Research Associate
The Child Welfare League of America
440 First Street, N.W. 3rd Floor
Washington, D.C. 20001-2085
Tel: (202) 662-4288
Fax: (202) 638-4004
Email: agordon@cwla.org
>>> Cynthia Blanchard <cblanche@icdc.com> 5/23/99 2:50:56 PM >>>
Briefly, my study examined the relationship between the services
provided to
families of children in foster care and family reunification. It was
a
retrospective longitudinal study of a cohort of 100 children who
entered foster care
through a public child welfare agency in 1994. Poverty, ethnicity,
length of time
in care, reason for the child's removal from the home, and the
emotional and
physical health of the child have previously been shown to be related
to family
reunification and were included in the study. The data were gathered
through case
record reviews and analyzed using chi-square and logistic regression.
Services included in the study were those offered directly by the child
welfare
agency (case plans, visitation plans, visitation, caseworker-parent
contacts, and
material services). Also included were services provided by other
agencies--both
public and private. None of the services offered directly by the child
welfare
agencies were statistically significant in their relationship to
family
reunification. In-patient drug treatment, parenting skills training,
and child
psychotherapy had positive statistical significance in their
relationship to family
reunification. There was a negative correlation between substance
abuse evaluations
and family reunification. The most frequently offered service to
parents was
psychotherapy which was not statistically significant in its
relationship to family
reunification. As other studies have found, the sample in this study
was poor and
people of color.
Among the important findings was the fact that over 40% of the children
placed were
five years old or younger. Over 35% of the children left foster care
within the
first month of placement and over 60% left withing the first six
months of
placement. In sum, this study again showed that the services provided
by a child
welfare agency cannot touch the larger problems of society which are
having a
greater impact on foster care and reunification than are services.
Cynthia Blanchard
rlott@unlnotes.unl.edu wrote:
> Ms. Blanchard,
>
> I am interested in your dissertation. I would like to know more
about the
> types of rehabilitation programs you studied, how you studied them
(and how you
> got your study participants), how you measured progress and closure,
and how you
> did your statistical analysis. We are interested in the things that
work for
> rehabilitation and any good research is very welcome. I would assume
at least
> some of the other members of the list would also be interested in
some more
> information about your work.
>
> Roger Lott,
> Center on Children, Families, and the Law
> University of Nebraska-Lincoln
>
> Cynthia Blanchard <cblanche@icdc.com> on 05/14/99 07:51:03 AM
>
> Please respond to CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@cornell.edu
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> To: Child Maltreatment Researchers
> <CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@cornell.edu>
>
> cc: (bcc: Roger C Lott/CCFL/UNL/UNEBR)
>
>
>
> Subject: Re: DRG's and Child Welfare
>
>
> You stated that placing children in foster care is a last resort.
However,
> this is not how the funding works. States are partially reimbursed
for each
> child in foster care--no maater how many are placed while services
are capped.
> AFSA also reimburses states for each child adopted. Thus, we say
that we want
> to prevent placements and to facilitate family reunification when
children are
> placed, but our funding does the opposite.
>
> I am completing my dissertation on services to families of children
in foster
> care and the relationship to family reunification. I have found that
almost no
> services had any statistical significance with family reunification.
I also
> found what many others have found--that the majority of children
placed come
> from families who are poor and minorities. We need more services
which are
> effective, particularly in the area of substance abuse, both to
prevent
> placement and for reunification. However, the child welfare system
cannot
> address the larger issues which lead to poor and minority children
being
> placed.
>
> I do agree that children need a permanent plan and absolutely should
not
> languish in foster care. However, I do not see AFSA, with its
emphasis on
> adoption, as the only solution. We need to do more to prevent
placements and
> to reunify families when children are placed.
>
> Cynthia Blanchard
> cblanche@icdc.com