I reviewed this research for my foster care book through the mid 90's (Foster Family Care: Theory and Practice). There is clear evidence of the harmful effects of multiple placements on children and families. However, there also needs to be research done on the interactive effects with children's "vulnerability"; ie some children bring challenges to foster care that make them more difficult to parent effectively. Judy Martin -----Original Message----- From: owner-CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@xxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@xxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Ben Saunders Sent: Thursday, August 25, 2005 8:39 AM To: Child Maltreatment Researchers Subject: Impact of multiple placements I am looking for definitive research (if it exists) on the impact, if any, of multiple fostercare placements on children. It appears to be a well-accepted clinical proposition that children who experience changes in fostercare placements and multiple fostercare placements are negatively impacted by these movements compared to children in only one or fewer placements, or children never removed. In other words, multiple fostercare placements result in increased emotional and behavioral difficulties for children. However, it also clinical lore that children with existing significant emotional and behavior problems at the time of removal are more likely to fail in placements, suggesting a reverse causal direction, i.e., kids with serious problems are a handful to manage and foster parents with those children are more likely to just give up and have them removed and placed elsewhere. Problem kids have more placements. Fostercare is not my area, so I am looking for the best, most well-accepted research into this question of the relationship between multiple fostercare placements and emotional and behavioral problems among children. Any citations, summaries, or directions would be appreciated. You may contact me back channel at saunders@xxxxxxxx. Thanks, Ben -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Benjamin E. Saunders, Ph.D. National Crime Victims Research and Treatment Center Medical University of South Carolina 165 Cannon Street, Box 250852 843-792-2945 Telephone Charleston, SC 29425 843-792-7146 Fax Visit our web site: www.musc.edu/cvc ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This E-mail, including any attachments, is intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed, and may contain information that is privileged, confidential, or protected from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, be aware that any disclosure, copying, dissemination, distribution, or use of the contents of this message, either in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited. If you have received this E-mail in error, please notify the sender immediately either by E-mail or telephone, and destroy all electronic and hard copies of this communication, including any attachments.
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