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Talk of changes to improve register after just 75 matches in two years

Posted: 22 April 2004 | Subscribe Online


Changes are needed to improve the failing adoption register, the Department for Education and Skills has confirmed.

The admission comes as it was revealed that the register, which is run for the government by adoption agency Norwood, had matched just 75 children with adopted families since it began operating fully two years ago.

With funding of more than £1.25m during that time, each match has cost £16,000, prompting questions about its long-term viability.

However, a DfES spokesperson said there were no plans to scrap the service and the department was "clear the register is right". However, the DfES admitted a recent review had shown improvements were needed but would not comment on what the changes might be.
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Meanwhile, a leading agency has dismissed fears that new adoption regulations could lead to councils matching hard-to-place children with adoptive parents overseas.

Deborah Cullen, legal officer at Baaf Adoption and Fostering, said it was unlikely that the regulations, which propose placing children who have been on the adoption register for 12 months with adoptive parents abroad, would lead to a dramatic rise in such arrangements.

Academics fear that the regulations - the consultation period for which ends this month - could encourage councils to place children abroad instead of in long-term foster care placements in the UK to meet government adoption targets.
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Anna Gupta, a lecturer in social work and child care at London University's Royal Holloway College, said: "Local authorities obsessed with meeting targets linked to performance indicators may go for this even when foster care may be better.

"Hard-to-place children may be matched with parents abroad, which may mean no contact with their family and there may not be the therapeutic services they need."

However, Cullen said it was unlikely that people from overseas would be "any more likely to want to adopt a hard-to-place child than someone from this country".


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