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. 2012 Sep 1;34(9):1825-1833.
doi: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2012.05.007.

Foster care re-entry: Exploring the role of foster care characteristics, in-home child welfare services and cross-sector services

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Foster care re-entry: Exploring the role of foster care characteristics, in-home child welfare services and cross-sector services

Sangmoo Lee et al. Child Youth Serv Rev. .

Abstract

This study seeks to advance our understanding of how modifiable and non-modifiable factors may impact the likelihood of re-entry into foster care. Children who entered foster care for the first time following at least one report of maltreatment and were then reunified were followed from exit to re-entry, age 18 or the end of the study period using longitudinal administrative data. Risk of re-entry was explored according to a range of modifiable and non-modifiable case and service characteristics. Children removed from homes with parents who had multiple risk factors (e.g., no high school diploma, mental health diagnosis, criminal record, or teen parents) or were receiving AFDC prior to entry were more likely to re-enter. The receipt of in-home child welfare services during or after foster care was associated with reduced risk of re-entry. Having the longest placement with a relative was associated with decreased risk of re-entry. In conclusion, both modifiable and non-modifiable factors are associated with re-entry into foster care. Among modifiable factors, services appear to have a particularly strong relationship to re-entry. Our data also suggest that in-home child welfare services provided during and after foster care may be associated with improved long-term permanency after return home. Given the continued import of caregiver risk factors even among reunified families, services provided to support reunification should include attention to caregiver needs outside parenting.

Keywords: Child maltreatment; Foster care; Risk factors.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Graph of re-entry hazard function in three month intervals.

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