“…Studies on children in public foster care (Eisenberg, 1961;Maas and Engler, 1959) suggest the alarming possibility that these programmes, owing to inadequacies which stem from meagre budgets, anachronistic concepts, and lack of community support, may in fact be adding to this reservoir of psychopathology rather than diminishing it. I have already called attention to the likelihood that under-privileged children are a group at risk for neuropsychiatric difficulty, both at organic and psychogenic levels (Pasamanick et al, 1956;Wortis et al, 1961). With some 270,000 children in foster care (Maas and Engler, 1959) and 2,250,000 supported by Aid to Dependent Children programmes in marginal families (Wiltse, 1960), we confront a population of 2| million children who face major mental hazards consequent upon deprivation.…”