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Adoptive parents seek more support

Posted: 23 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


Prospective parents will turn their backs on adoption unless they receive better support, a conference has heard.

Monica Duck, director of the Post-Adoption Centre, said the Adoption and Children Act 2002, expected to come into force in December, required adoptive parents to go through an assessment of need without guaranteeing their needs would be met.

She told the Norfolk Council and University of East Anglia conference that adoptive parents often complained that, when their adopted children were given counselling for mental health problems, they were given no support at all.
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"We are going to lose many adoptive parents because they are saying 'we are not being listened to'," she said.

Barrister Dr Caroline Ball told the conference the legislation could face multiple challenges under the Human Rights Act 1998.

It allows courts to have children adopted without their parents' consent if the welfare of the child requires it - a clause which replaces a list of more specific criteria.

She said the welfare of the child was a subjective test and the European Court of Human Rights had been reluctant to separate children permanently from their birth families unless there were cogent grounds.


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