2009
DOI: 10.1080/15548730903347861
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Typologies of Children in Foster Care for Reasons Other than Abuse or Neglect

Abstract: In Kansas, 45% of foster care placements occur for reasons besides child abuse or neglect. Yet little is known about their critical characteristics. By learning more about these cases, policies and practices can be tailored accordingly. This research utilized a statewide random sample (n D 254) of target children entering care in 2005. Two-step cluster analysis was used to generate typologies. Comparisons were made relative to child, parent/caretaker, and child welfare service variables. The analyses yielded f… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Additionally, caseworkers could enter up to six removal reasons, reducing the chance that they had to exclude or choose between reasons. A prior statewide study that included case record reviews indicated that removal reason data were largely consistent with case record data that would also indicate parental substance use (McDonald & Brook, 2009). It should be noted that the study's purpose was not to estimate prevalence of parental substance use or abuse.…”
Section: Independent Variablesmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Additionally, caseworkers could enter up to six removal reasons, reducing the chance that they had to exclude or choose between reasons. A prior statewide study that included case record reviews indicated that removal reason data were largely consistent with case record data that would also indicate parental substance use (McDonald & Brook, 2009). It should be noted that the study's purpose was not to estimate prevalence of parental substance use or abuse.…”
Section: Independent Variablesmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Foster care is a form of care in which a child is placed in a different family than the family of origin (Rock, Michelson, Thomson, & Day, 2015;⁎Strijker & Van Oijen, 2008) for several reasons. The largest percentage of foster children is placed because of inadequate parenting, such as abusive and neglectful behavior, often combined with parental psychopathology, parental delinquency and/or substance abuse; much smaller percentages of children are placed because of parental death and parental incarceration (McDonald & Brook, 2009;Okma-Rayzner, 2006;Shaw, Bright, & Sharpe, 2015;Takayama, Wolfe, & Coulter, 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The majority of children within institutional care (used interchangeably with Orphan homes) already have had a history of neglect, or abandonment of a kind before their contact with the institutional care. Sometimes, these children are victims of abusive behaviors and have experienced parental loss (McDonald & Brook, 2009). Following these experiences, these children are further exposed to placement-related neglect and rejection at different three broadly categorized stages: at their entry into the institutional care, during their stay within Orphan homes (an experience of care neglect that sometimes lead to their rejection or dissolution of adoption after the completion of their adoption; Onayemi, 2019; Selwyn et al, 2014) and lastly, while at the verge of being placed within homes where their growth and security may be ascertained.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%