top of page

More Contact with Biological Parents Predicts Shorter Length of Time in Out of Home Care and Mental Health of Youth in the Child Welfare System

  • 3 days ago
  • 2 min read

Abstract

Foster care is intended to be a temporary placement option. Viewing permanency as central to child well-being, current U.S. policies aim to limit the length of time a child spends in out-of-home foster placements. There is little recent research, however, on predictors of length of time in out-of-home care. The purposes of this study were to test if more frequent contact with biological parents predicted less time in out-of-home care, and determine if more frequent contact with biological parents was associated with better mental health outcomes using three waves of data from the National Survey on Child and Adolescent Well-Being II, a U.S. nationally representative dataset of youth involved with the child welfare system. Findings revealed that more frequent contact with biological mothers was associated with fewer cumulative days in out-of-home care. Among covariates, older child age was related to longer stays in out-of-home care, and Black youth experienced more cumulative days in out-of-home care compared to White youth. Links between frequency of contact and youth mental health outcomes also were tested, and more frequent contact with both mothers and fathers was associated with lower mental health symptoms. Being separated from siblings also was associated with more mental health problems, and compared with foster care, being in kinship care was negatively associated with mental health problems. A discussion of the findings in light of U.S. polices and best-practices is included.


Keywords: child maltreatment, child mental health, parent-child contact, permanency, visitation




CITE

McWey LM, Cui M. More Contact with Biological Parents Predicts Shorter Length of Time in Out of Home Care and Mental Health of Youth in the Child Welfare System. Child Youth Serv Rev. 2021 Sep;128:106164. doi: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106164.

Comments


Des études de cohorte fondées sur des données administratives appariées montrent que le placement d’un enfant par les services de protection est associé à une dégradation majeure de la santé mentale maternelle — plus marquée que lors du décès d’un enfant — ainsi qu’à un excès de risque suicidaire et de mortalité, difficilement explicable par les seuls facteurs familiaux partagés.

Ces résultats s’inscrivent dans une dynamique de deuil complexe et de marginalisation structurelle, où des parents, stigmatisés et invisibilisés dans les politiques publiques, restent insuffisamment soutenus, ce qui souligne l’urgence de développer des interventions spécifiques et préventives.

Suivez l'actualité OSSIPE

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
bottom of page