The Effect Of Foster Care Fresno CA On Children

By Arthur Wood


Approximately 800,000 children end up in a foster care (FC) home in America each year. FC is designed to help abandoned, abused and orphaned children find homes, where they are safe and can receive proper care until a more stable home environment, can be found for them. The problem is that the American foster care Fresno CA system is loosely organized and makes living situations hard on the kids involved by not meeting their individual needs fully.

Children living in the care system are far more protected than in the past, which means that the children and young people are listened to, when before their voices may not have been heard. This positive move in child protection makes it more difficult for foster carers caring for children, such as if a young person make a false allegation of abuse, it will be investigated.

A complaint may involve a view about an FC's approach to the care of a fostered child or the way in that they respond to a child's needs or behavior. A foster carer could use bad language or inappropriate consequences for misbehaving children. Children's Social Services is directed by Safeguarding Children Boards which are by law set up by the Local Authority. The Safeguarding Boards have clear legally defined rules for investigating complaints by children and those people with a legitimate interest in the child's welfare.

The memory may make many children timid around other people or just the opposite; make them direct anger at the families who take them in under the FC program. Many of these children require mental health services and often have physical disabilities due to poor health.

Some examples for long-term FC would be: There are times when children come into care with the intention that they will only be in the program for a short-term, but events make it impossible for them to return home. Some families might decide to foster a child long-term instead of adopting them because they know that they will need a high-level of support for many years to come and they want to be sure to get access to it.

As discussed before, a Serious Concern with regards to a FC's practice may come to light after a complaint has been made. If the fostering agency the carer is registered with has a Serious Concern, which does not need investigation under the Local Authorities Child Protections procedures, they will have to investigate.

Statistics show that children who age-out rarely have anyone to turn to for advice or guidance once they reach the maximum FC age of 18. There are mentoring programs available to help, but these children may not know where to find such outreach programs. Many of these teens become parents themselves at an early age, and only about 46 percent of them actually graduate from high school.

After some investigation by the fostering agency, they may decide that the carer's need to develop some of their skills and recommend further training. They could change the approval range, for example, recommending that the carer's work with either younger or older children. Finally, the fostering agency may decide that they can no longer work with the FC's and take them through a process of de-registration.




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