Abstract

Children who are adopted from care are more likely to experience enduring emotional and behavioral problems across development; however, adoptees' trajectories of mental health problems and factors that impact their trajectories are poorly understood. Therefore, we used multilevel growth analyses to chart adoptees' internalizing and externalizing problems across childhood, and examined the associations between preadoptive risk and postadoptive protective factors on their trajectories. This was investigated in a prospective longitudinal study of case file records (N = 374) and questionnaire-based follow-ups (N = 96) at approximately 5, 21, and 36 months postadoptive placement. Preadoptive adversity (indexed by age at placement, days in care, and number of adverse childhood experiences) was associated with higher internalizing and externalizing scores; the decrease in internalizing scores over childhood was accelerated for those exposed to lower levels of preadoptive risk. Warm adoptive parenting was associated with a marked reduction in children's internalizing and externalizing problems over time. Although potentially limited by shared methods variance and lack of variability in parental warmth scores, these findings demonstrate the deleterious impact of preadoptive risk and the positive role of exceptionally warm adoptive parenting on children's trajectories of mental health problems and have relevance for prevention and intervention strategies.

Highlights

  • Background of adoption in the UnitedKingdom Currently in the United Kingdom, the Children Act 1989 (UK) and the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014 (Welsh Assembly) provide the legal framework for a child being supported within his or her family and community, establishing the local authority’s duties and court powers

  • Children’s early adjustment problems and adoptive parental warmth The correlation between the internalizing scores in W1 and parental warmth in W2 was r (56) = –0.28, p = .039 and between W1 externalizing and W2 parental warmth was r (56) = –0.21, p = .125, yet analyses did not indicate that internalizing or externalizing at W1 predicted parental warmth beyond parental socioeconomic status (SES), odds ratio = 0.92, 95% confidence interval (CI) [0.86, 1.00], Wald χ2 (1) = 3.50, p = .061, odds ratio = 0.94, 95% CI [0.87, 1.01], Wald χ2 (1) = 2.37, p = .123, respectively

  • The results indicated a significant clustering of internalizing scores across waves at the individual level, likelihood ratio (LR) χ2 (1) = 46.93, p < .0001, intraclass correlation (ICC) = .56, 95% CI [.42, .69]

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Summary

Introduction

Kingdom Currently in the United Kingdom, the Children Act 1989 (UK) and the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014 (Welsh Assembly) provide the legal framework for a child being supported within his or her family and community, establishing the local authority’s duties and court powers. If the court endorses the care plan, a placement order is made, and the child is authorized to move to an adoptive placement. Ten weeks into the adoptive placement, the prospective adopters can apply for an adoption order Up until this point, the parental responsibility for the child is shared by the local authority, the birth parents, and the prospective adopters; in addition, birth parents can seek permission to revoke the placement order/contest the adoption order. Once the adoption order is made, full parental responsibility is granted to the adoptive parents (National Adoption Service, 2017)

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