doi.org/10.1017/cha.2014.5

Article type: Original Research

PUBLISHED 21 May 2014

Volume 39 Issue 2

Family Foster Care: Can it Survive the Evidence?

Frank Ainsworth and Patricia Hansen

name here
Frank Ainsworth1 * ORCID logo

name here
Patricia Hansen2

Affiliations

1 School of Social Work and Community Welfare, Townsville campus, Queensland 4811, James Cook University, Australia

2 Hansen Legal, Parramatta, Sydney, NSW 2135, NSW 2150 and Australian Catholic University, Australia

Correspondence

*Dr Frank Ainsworth

Contributions

Frank Ainsworth -

Patricia Hansen -

CITATION: Ainsworth F., & Hansen P. (2014). Family Foster Care: Can it Survive the Evidence? Children Australia, 39(2), 1911. doi.org/10.1017/cha.2014.5

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Abstract

The media coverage of foster care in Australia is replete with adoration for foster carers who look after disadvantaged and difficult children and youth. As this article is being written, New South Wales is holding a ‘foster care week’ with enhanced media coverage and praise for foster carers, the recruitment of new foster carers and acclaim for the ‘foster carer of the year’. Yet, there is another side to foster care that offers less than ideal circumstances for children in care. There is the worrying issue of multiple placements, the problem with children and young people running away from foster care before they reach the legal age for discharge, and evidence of increased incidence of poor educational attainment and involvement in juvenile offending for young people in foster care. In addition, there are cases of foster children being abused by foster carers. As adults, former foster-care children and youth are over-represented among the homeless, in adult correction centres, the unemployed and the users of mental health services. This article documents these negative outcomes of entering the foster-care system, and asks whether family (or non-relative) foster care can survive this evidence. For too many children and young people, family foster care may not provide better outcomes than less-than-optimal parental care from which the children were removed. An alternative is to reduce the use of family foster care and increase intensive support and parenting education services for birth parents who have limited parenting capacity. The aim should be to limit the number of children being taken into care.

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