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Channeling King Solomon: Reducing DisruptedRelationships & Improving Permanency. Judith Silver, Ph.D ., Co-Director Safe Place: Center for Children’s Safety & Health. Questions to Ponder. How does removing children from their family impact them emotionally?
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Channeling King Solomon: Reducing DisruptedRelationships & Improving Permanency Judith Silver, Ph.D.,Co-Director Safe Place: Center for Children’s Safety & Health
Questions to Ponder How does removing children from their family impact them emotionally? How can we shape practice early in a child’s encounters with the courts & child welfare system to reduce adversity?
Focus of Today’s Discussion • Impact of disrupted relationships • Promoting stability through: • Placement decisions • Visitation practices • Permanency planning
Placement Instability & Disrupted Relationships • Instability: • the quality of being unstable. Especially lack of emotional stability • Unstable: • Not firm or fixed, characterized by the inability to control the emotions • Disrupt: • To break apart, to throw into disorder, to cause to break down • Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary
Northwest Foster Care Alumni Study (N = 1500) Compared to the general population, Foster Care alumni more likely to experience rates of mental illness: • Post Traumatic Stress: 6 times • Substance Abuse: 4 times • Anxiety Disorder: 2.5 times • Depression: 2 times
54 % 43 % 25 % 22 % 20 % 16 % 12 % 10 % 4% 3 %
Casey National Alumni Study Alumni who succeeded-What works? • Delayed first placement due to family support efforts • Fewer placement disruptions • Largest + effect on High School Completion • Promoting a positive relationship between child and foster parent • Twice as likely to complete High School
Casey National Alumni Study Alumni with a higher number of placements were more likely to experience: • Decreased likelihood of reunification • Greater severity of behavior problems • More time in residential care
Theories on why placements disrupt • Is it due to the System? • Is it due to the kids?
Theories Why Placements Disrupt Behavior Problems Placement Change
Research Study What is the impact of placement stability on children’s behavior problems after entering foster care? N = 729 children 15 years old & younger Behavior evaluated @ entry to FC Placement Stabilityeval’d after 12 months FC Behaviorevaluated after 18 months Rubin, D., et al (2007) Pediatrics, 119, 336-344.
Placement Stability • Early Stability 52% • Late Stability 19% • Unstable 28%
Probability of Behavioral Problems at 18 Months, by Child's Placement Stability & Baseline Risk for Problems
36% 25% 22%
Conclusions • Placement Stability Strongly Associated with Behavioral Outcomes • Children in FC experience placement instability unrelated to their baseline problems • Placement instability has significant impact on their behavioral wellbeing • It’s critical to improve placement stability as a means to improve children’s outcomes • Rubin, D. , et al (2007). Pediatrics, 119, 336-344
Changing Placements = Disrupting Relationships When we move a child in care from one home to another home…or one placement to another placement… We are moving a child from one relationship to another relationship Dorothy Henderson, LCSW, Through the Eyes of an Infant: Why Early Relationships are Important, Jewish Board of Family & Children’s Services, NYC
Early Relationships • Relationships: the building blocks of healthy development • What children learn • How they react to people & events • What they expect from themselves & others • Deeply based on relationships with parents National Research Council & Institute of Medicine (2000) Neurons to Neighborhods
Emergence of Early Relationships Newborn babies are completely vulnerable & depend on caregivers for: • Temperature regulation • Neuroendocrine regulation • Protection from infection • Food • Protection from danger • Comfort Dozier, M. [ccc]
Emergence of Early Relationships • Infant is hard-wired to recognize patterns • Infants begin to recognize patterns through repetitions of daily caregiving routines • Feeding, play, diaper changes, bedtime
Baby Cries => Mother Arrives => Soothes Baby => Baby Learns through all 5 Senses • Sound • Sight • Scent • Touch • Taste
Parent-Infant Interactions • Baby learns from these episodes of engagement: • What it’s like to be with mother & others • What can I expect to happen? • What usually happens • What is “normal”? • Babies use internal models to evaluate current situations Stern, Daniel (2002). The First Relationship. Harvard U Press
Video clip: Infants’ Expectations of Mother Still-Face Paradigm Edward Tronick, Ph.D. Harvard University Children’s Hospital, Boston www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AGJFg6twjg www.youtube.com/watch?v=HD3_nHXFkmw
Implications for Child Welfare & Courts • Even tiny infants will have a profound response when moved from: • Placement to placement • When we move a baby in care from one home to another home…or one placement to another placement… what we are really doing is….moving a baby from one relationship to another relationship.”Dorothy Henderson, LCSW, Jewish Board of Child & Family Services, NYC
Attachment Formation • Children internalize how to • Calm down, feel soothed • Protect self • Ideas about Trust • The Right to be Cared for • The Right to be Safe
Grieving Disrupted Relationships • Adults don’t recognize when very young children grieve • Children’s behaviors are misinterpreted: • Withdraws or Avoids Contact • Appears not to need comfort when hurt • OR • Indiscriminant in showing affection • M. Dozier, 2002
Promoting Attachmentfor Young Children in FC • Very young foster children need frequent & consistent contact with their parents • Frequent visits have been found to: • Reduce pain of separation • Promote attachment • Increase parent’s motivation to change • Help parents practice skills • Increase likelihood of timely permanency • Smariga, 2007; Potter & Rothschild, (2002)
Unique to babies involved with child welfare system Extraordinary Stressors: • Prolonged Neglect for most • Physical Abuse for some • Separation from Family Impact: • Infants’ biological stress responses • Their coping strategies can threaten their well-being
“David” Enters Foster Care • 7 month old boy with several fractures. Placed in foster care wearing a body cast • No eye contact, flat emotions or piercing high pitched cry
8 Weeks Later • Happy & engaged with foster family • Hysterical if someone approaches his legs • Terrified of loud noises
Developmental Considerations in Placement Decisions • Children’s reactions to separation from parents differ by developmental stage • Children between 6 months & 3 years old are most vulnerable to separation • Older children, though vulnerable, have the language skills to better understand loss and cope with change • Young children need frequent contact with their parents • Smariga, 2004
Channeling King Solomon Decisions must ensure • Safety & wellbeing • Permanency How can we minimize instability for children? • ASFA & Fostering Connections Legislation
Promoting Commitment & Stability • Concurrent planning: • Support child’s attachments to family AND to consistent foster caregiver • Keep relationships stable whenever possible: • Don’t move child when not necessary • Engaging & Finding Family • Biological relationship does not trump stability & commitment
Judicial & Child Welfare Decision-Makers Can Ensure • At onset placement decisions promote long-term stability • Placement decisions promote healthy child-caregiver attachments • Ties are maintained with birth parents & siblings with frequent quality visits • Permanency decisions respect bonds children have forged in out of home care • NCJFCJ, ABA, Zero to Three (2009). Healthy Beginnings, Healthy Futures: A Judge’s Guide
Family Interaction to Promote Permanency Placement location supports: • Frequent, meaningful visitation • Parents’ involvement in healthcare appointments Ensure visits are in the child’s best interests: • Family’s willingness to get help • Child’s reaction to visits • Therapeutic needs of child • -Ginther & Ginther
Family InteractionVisitation Plan Develop Family Interaction Plan: • Individualized • Developmentally appropriate • Promotes Permanency Guided by ongoing assessment of parents’ ability to: • safely care for children • Interact positively with children
The Caregiver Capacity Checklist • What are the specific challenges faced by the caregiver in caring for this child? • What are the learning requirements for caregivers to meet the child’s needs? • What are the specific illustrations of this caregiver’s ability to meet the child’s needs? Dicker & Gordon, 2004
“Devon” • 26 months old with Failure to Thrive • Weekly visits focus on mother-child feeding behaviors • Referred for pediatric evaluation
Learning Requirements forDevon’s Parents • Make appointments with several medical specialists • Attend Appointments with Devon • Follow Through with Surgery • Follow Up with Medical Recommendations • Follow Medication Regimens
Family InteractionVisitation Plan Meaningful activities of daily living Adequate level of supervision Sensitive to parents’ & children’s emotions • It’s natural for children to become dysregulated and does not mean the parent erred during visit • Monitor child’s reactions over time E. Leonard, 3003; M. Smariga (2007).
Visitation: Relationship-Based & Competency-Based INITIAL Phase: • Maintain ties between parent & children • Assess parent’s capacity to care for child • Develop goals If progress is minimal: • Reconsider reunification as proper goal Rose Wentz, Best Practices in Visits. www.hunter.cuny.edu/socwork/nrcfcpp/
Caregiver CapacityRed Flags! For parents with addictions: • Noncompliance with substance abuse treatment • Random drug testing critical For parents with psychiatric disturbance: • Noncompliance with treatment /medication • Dicker & Gordon, 2004
Caregiver CapacityRed Flags! Noncompliance with child’s health appointments & medication or therapeutic regimens • This impacts Safety, as well as Wellbeing A child’s poor growth • Need to have Growth Curve plotted by healthcare provider • Dicker & Gordon, 2004
MIDDLE Phase: Activities to help parent learn & practice new skills & behaviors Now visits are: • More frequent • Longer • In a Variety of settings Gradual reduction in supervision
TRANSITION PhaseSmoothing Transition to Reunification Maximize contact Least Restrictive Setting Evaluate Remaining stressors Ensure services to help parent meet child’s needs Ginther, N. & Ginther, J.
Reunification Aftercare • Monitoring & Services • Arrange visits with foster parent to maintain relationships
Overcoming Barriers • Prioritize Cases • Involve Foster Parents • Collaborate with Community Stakeholders
The Judge’s Role • Develop clear, enforceable, written visitation orders for each case • Develop local rules that address visitation • Facilitate collaborative community efforts to improve visitation practices • Encourage Cross-System Training for all participants in dependency court re: • child development • Strategies to improve quality of visitation • L. Edwards (2003)