2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2206.2011.00768.x
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Breakdown of teenage placements in Danish out‐of‐home care

Abstract: A B S T R AC TThis study deals with the problem of breakdown in out-of-home placements for Danish teenagers. How often are these placements prematurely terminated against the requests and intentions of the child welfare authorities? Which factors seem to increase and decrease placement breakdown? The sample consists of 225 youths and 367 placements during the years 2004-2008. Among the 225 youths, 44% experienced a breakdown, and 33% of the 367 placements ended with a breakdown. A large proportion of the place… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…When foster parents felt services were lacking, some cited this as a reason for not choosing to foster a teen. It is essential that pre and post-placement services prepare parents and teens for placement and remain involved to provide support throughout the process (Farmer et al, 2001;Olsson et al, 2012). This is an issue that foster parents continue to face as they provide placement for children and as some move forward with adoption, however, more attention to the needs of children and families involved in the child welfare system on a systemic and policy level is critical.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…When foster parents felt services were lacking, some cited this as a reason for not choosing to foster a teen. It is essential that pre and post-placement services prepare parents and teens for placement and remain involved to provide support throughout the process (Farmer et al, 2001;Olsson et al, 2012). This is an issue that foster parents continue to face as they provide placement for children and as some move forward with adoption, however, more attention to the needs of children and families involved in the child welfare system on a systemic and policy level is critical.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This could be related to having a stronger informal support network, more training or education, an ability to respond to the "emotional age" of the foster youth, or expected monitoring of activity outside of the house based on past experience (Farmer, Lipscombe, & Moyers, 2005). Foster placements with the opportunity for preparation and initial visits are less likely to disrupt (Ellingsen et al, 2011;, and active involvement of the adolescent in choosing a foster family has also been shown to increase success of the placement (Hedin et al, 2011;Olsson et al, 2012).…”
Section: Successful Fostering Of Adolescentsmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…Placement instability is a common concern for foster care children and has adverse effects on children's psychosocial functioning (Fisher, Stoolmiller, Mannering, Takahashi, & Chamberlain, 2011;Leathers, 2006;Ryan & Testa, 2005). Almost half of teenagers (44%) placed with foster families in Denmark experienced disruption of placement (Olsson, Egelund, & Høst, 2012) and similar rates, 30-53%, were found in the UK, Sweden, Norway and Canada (Perry, Daly, & Kotler, 2012).…”
Section: Deinstitutionalization Efforts In the Post-soviet Regionmentioning
confidence: 63%