AI Article Synopsis

  • Child welfare systems are increasingly placing foster children with kinship foster parents to provide stability and emotional support, but these caregivers often lack the necessary financial and educational resources.
  • A study examined the barriers kinship foster parents face when accessing training and licensure, highlighting issues like poor communication, practical challenges, and irrelevant content.
  • Despite these barriers, kinship foster parents who participated in specific licensure training showed improved parenting skills and awareness of support options, with in-person training yielding more effective outcomes than virtual sessions.

Article Abstract

Child welfare jurisdictions increasingly place foster children with kinship foster parents as a means of meeting their need for stability, family connection, and behavioral and emotional support. However, the lack of financial and educational assistance provided to kin by child welfare authorities often undermines these caregivers' ability to provide effective and lasting care for the children in their homes. This study uses a mixed-methods approach to understand how formal training and licensure processes can aid kinship foster parents in facilitating positive outcomes for children and youth in the foster care system. Specifically, we investigated the barriers experienced by kinship foster parents while trying to access existing licensure-based training and supports, as well as the initial outcomes of a kin-tailored licensure training curriculum alternatingly administered in in-person and virtual delivery formats. Participants reported that incomplete or inaccurate communication about licensing processes, practical difficulties in attending training, irrelevant session content, and stringent licensing requirements acted as barriers to accessing these resources. However, participants in the kin-specific licensure training administered in this study reported high levels of learning related to key parenting competencies and increased awareness of kinship permanency supports, although these outcomes appeared to be less pronounced among those receiving the training in a virtual format. These findings suggest that researchers and policymakers should consider developing, implementing, and evaluating further initiatives to provide accessible and tailored supports to kinship foster parents as a means of improving outcomes for the children in their care.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8985387PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10560-022-00844-6DOI Listing

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