A Comparison of Foster Care Reentry After Adoption in Two Large U.S. States

Nancy Rolock, Kevin R. White, Kerrie Ocasio, Lixia Zhang, Michael J. MacKenzie, Rowena Wong - Research on Social Work Practice

Abstract

Purpose:

This study from the Special Issue on Adoption Breakdown of the journal of Research on Social Work Practice examines foster care reentry after adoption, in Illinois and New Jersey. The provision of services and supports to adoptive families have garnered recent attention due to concern about the long-term stability of adoptive homes.

Method:

This study used administrative data to examine the pre-adoption characteristics associated with post-adoption foster care reentry. Children were tracked longitudinally, using administrative data, for five to fifteen years (depending on their date of adoption), or the age of majority.

Results:

Results indicated that most (95%) children did not reenter foster care after adoption. Findings from survival models suggested key covariates that may help to identify children most at risk for post-adoption reentry: child race, age at adoption, number of placement moves in foster care, and time spent in foster care prior to adoption.

Conclusion:

Study findings may help identify families most at-risk for post-adoption difficulties in order to develop preventative adoption service.