Developmental Challenges Faced by Adolescent Orphans and Vulnerable Children in Chimanimani District in Manicaland Province, Zimbabwe

Vincent Chidhumo, Fortunate Zambezi, Pridemore Thondhlana

The study investigated the psychosocial consequences of poverty on rural Zimbabwean learners from child-headed households who are lagging behind in their learning. The study also aimed to generate recommendations based on the research findings.

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The Role of the Social Worker in Developing Children's Independence in Community Care Homes

Rita Virbalienė, Janina Čižikienė

This article aims to examine how the training and competencies of social workers during the deinstitutionalization processes in Lithuania impacted the preparation of children for independent living in society. The review of the scientific literature, presented in the article and the research data, can be applied to improve community care homes providing social services to highlight the role of social workers in creating a safe environment for the child, involving the child in the planning and organization of activities, fostering self-confidence and their abilities.

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Special Challenges Working with Foster Care Youth in the Inpatient Setting

Michael W. Naylor, James Chambliss, Ravneet Singh, Robin Du

This article details to unique challenges faced by youth in care in the US when receiving inpatient treatment and how that varies in several ways from the care of non-foster care youth. Children in care have more medical, behavioral, and psychiatric problems and require health care at higher rates than youth not engaged in the child welfare system.

Life-Course Trajectories of Children Through the U. S. Foster Care System

Dylan Jones, Rebecca Orsi-Hunt, Hyunil Kim, Melissa Jonson-Reid, Brett Drake

This article details the authors' findings that provide the first description of foster care trajectories in the US. Both practice and policy formulation can benefit from these empirically supported descriptions. Using such trajectory typologies, researchers can now explore how trajectories may predict wellbeing outcomes.

The Commodification of Care: Precarious Custodial Relationships, Disability, and Settler-Colonialism

Nicole Ineese-Nash, Kathryn Underwood, Arlene Hache, Patty Douglas

In this chapter, the authors explore the intricate relationships between young disabled children, their families, institutional settings, and disability services in Canada, with an emphasis on the challenges stemming from unstable custodial dynamics and governmental interference.

A Decade of Outsourcing in Health and Social Care in England: What Was it Meant to Achieve?

Anders Bach-Mortensen, Benjamin Goodair, Christine Corlet Walker

This article provides an analysis of key policy and regulatory documents preceding or accompanying outsourcing policies in England (e.g., policy document relating to the 2012 and 2022 Health and Social Care Acts and the 2014 Care Act), and peer reviewed research on the impact of outsourcing within the NHS, adult's social care, and children's social care.

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