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The adoption experience

Posted: 22 May 2003 | Subscribe Online


The picture painted by the consultation with young people who had been adopted, carried out by A National Voice, contrasts dramatically with that most often offered in the media and by politicians.

For we do not see a group of young people who were all languishing in care, desperate to be adopted. Even more worrying, many of them are still not happy with their adoption many years later.

These young people's responses show how far the adoption agenda has been dominated by the concerns of professionals, policy-makers and adoptive parents. Many of them resented being cut off from their birth families, for example. Even when there was contact, many felt it was inadequate and given grudgingly. This surely reflects the weight given to the priorities of the different parties. Although existing family relationships will be top of the list for many children, they will often be at odds with the priorities of adoptive parents who want to build a new family with its own identity.
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Given the anecdotal evidence that professionals fear that the pressure to increase adoptions and reduce delays could lead to exactly the kinds of problems these young people describe, this study is even more significant.

However, it is also very small. The Department of Health should commission a large-scale investigation into young people's experiences of adoption without delay.


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