1 / 21

Lived Mental Health Experiences of African American Adolescents in Foster Care

Lived Mental Health Experiences of African American Adolescents in Foster Care. Ella M. Scott PhD, RN, CNS-BC Assistant Professor Kent State University, College of Nursing Kent, Ohio August 6, 2008. Andrew. Outline. Purpose/Problem Statement Methods/Sample Analysis/Results

maximos
Download Presentation

Lived Mental Health Experiences of African American Adolescents in Foster Care

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lived Mental Health Experiences of African American Adolescents in Foster Care Ella M. Scott PhD, RN, CNS-BC Assistant Professor Kent State University, College of Nursing Kent, Ohio August 6, 2008

  2. Andrew

  3. Outline • Purpose/Problem Statement • Methods/Sample • Analysis/Results • Recommendations

  4. Purpose of Research • To explore the lived mental health (MH) experiences of African American adolescents in foster care (FC) • Gain knowledge and understanding of the MH experiences of AAA in FC

  5. Problem Statement • Crisis in MH in US w/children/adol • >problem in FC ( National Action Agenda /Children’s Mental Health, 2001) • >MH problem AA children in FC

  6. Problem Statement • Foster Care • Welfare service for children who must live apart from their parents for a period of time for various reasons (Child Welfare League of America, 2004) • >500,000 children in foster care(Sedlak & Boadhurst, 1996) • Disproportional AA children in FC • 15% of U.S. child population • 49% of foster care population (Child Welfare League of America, 2003

  7. Overview of Literature • Adolescence • Vulnerability • inappropriate behavior (e.g. drug use), insecurity, emotional crises, mental health disorders, and other problems (Egan, 1997). • Identity • time for searching, determining identity (ethnicity) • defining oneself as person (Papalia et al., 2004) • 30% children in FC adolescents 11-15 yr (Child Welfare League of America, 2003)

  8. Overview of Literature • Children/AA • System of child welfare in U.S. maintained hx of racial discrimination for AA children/White dominance/control (Billingsley & Giovannoni, 1972). • Misguided view • Black children can/should function separated from Black families • Permeated most concepts on child welfare (Billingsley & Giovannoni, 1972).

  9. Overview of Literature • Child welfare services institutionalized in U.S. • Surrogate parental care is focus of care of children separated from parents • Services to promote welfare of children living w/own families sparsely developed/minute portion of child welfare efforts (Billingsley & Giovannoni, 1972). • By 1900 orphanages and foster homes became independent of organizations that had worked directly with families and children in their homes.

  10. Overview of Literature • Bureaucratization and professionalization of social work infused means of caring for children (Billingsley & Giovannoni, 1972). • Child welfare services priority remains placing children away from their parents. • Bureaucratization is organized system of agencies w/specialized functions/elaborate governing rules. • Bureaucracies funded based on functions they performed. • Services organized by functions, but functions not necessarily promote best interests of children and families. • The result was that child welfare services and services to children in their own homes became separate endeavors. • Black children or children of color have generally not fared well under policies and practices that stem from bureaucratic arrangements (Billingsley & Giovannoni, 1972).

  11. Overview of Literature • Results to AA children • insufficient or no services for Black children • inequality of services • inadequate efforts to change system (Billingsley & Giovannoni, 1972). • Majority of reports to child protective services involves cases of neglect (USDHHS Children of Color, 2003)

  12. Methods Study Design • Phenomenological approach: geared to qualities of humans (Giorgi, 2005) • Descriptions of raw everyday lived-through experiences • Philosophy: How do we know or what constitutes the nature of a phenomenon (Ray, 1994; Annells,1996) • Hermeneutic approach • Implies understanding • Means uncovering a phenomenon’s concealed meanings (Omery, 1983)

  13. Methods Setting • Midwestern state, population 400,000 • 25% <18yrs • Only 8% AA • 33% of FC placements AA children/adoles Sample • Target AAA, 15-17 yrs • Of Color/Black, Mixed black • Nine (n=9)

  14. Methods Procedure • Recruitment • Children Services of Child Welfare • Data Collection • Face-to-face interviews • Audiotaped • 172 pages of transcribed data

  15. Methods • Summary of participants’ characteristics • 1 to 7 siblings. • Multi-placements - mean 6.8. • Highest number of placements -12, next highest 10. • Lowest number of placements - 3. Number of years in FC 4 to 14 years. • 4 of participants stated they were in FC because drug use by their mothers. • 2 participants did not know why they were in FC. • 2 male participants experienced the deaths of their mothers. • One of the 2 participants was 5 when placed in FC shortly after his mother’s death. • The other participant was 11 when his mother died, in FC for 8 years.

  16. Methods • Summary of participants’ characteristics • All but 1 had diagnosed mental disorder e.g. separation anxiety disorder, ADHD, oppositional defiant disorder, obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, depression, PTSD. • All w/diagnosed condition treated w/medication/therapy. • One female sexual/abuse/witness abuse of siblings. • All separated from siblings . • Data reported by adolescents, not chart review. • Identifying data eliminated/names replaced by pseudonyms to protect confidentiality/privacy.

  17. Methods Analysis Giorgi’s 4 Step • Listen to interview tape, read transcript, get sense of overall substance of data • Identify units for meaning of the experience • Develop description of major themes • Determine whole meaning of experience (Giorgi, 1985)

  18. Results 3 Themes Emerged from Data • Antecedents r/t separation from biological families to FC • Consequences r/t separation from biological families to FC • Adverse perceptions of MH diagnoses & tx

  19. Recommendations • More research needed to: • Create policies/practices < MH problems for adols • Explore better ways of preventing situations that may result in separations from birth families • Focus on MH problems r/t separating from families • Identify better interventions/support for adolescents when separation occurs • Determine alternate means of dealing w/child abuse and neglect • Eliminate poverty

  20. Recommendations • Immediate • Allow children/adolescents separated from their families to have regular contact w/their birth families especially siblings (Minnesota Model) • Communicate better w/children/adols r/t reasons for separations • Provide anger management

  21. Questions?? Rare

More Related