Anti-abortion laws are becoming increasingly prominent in today's age. Foster care homes are also becoming gradually prominent, and it is very clearly an unsatisfactory alternative in most cases. The United States of America is becoming more strict on abortion, and some states are even banning and restricting them. Women in tight situations cannot get proper care for their pregnancies, and while some women cannot afford to care for their children, they end up giving birth to their child nonconsensually, only to leave them in what they believe is a safe foster care system until they are of legal age to make their own decisions. Though people immediately think of a caring home for children when they think of the term “foster”, foster care homes …show more content…
If anti abortion laws in the United States follow through, there will be flooding in foster homes, and it will eventually lead to an increase of allegations from foster homes. The lack of staffing for foster homes also has a factor in the housing and the well-being of youth under the age of eighteen.
The toll that these allegations take on the children in question is unacceptable and should never be taken lightly. The government is not taking these problems seriously. The parents are not receiving the help that they need, and they are not getting the support that they should have in order to get their child back, if they so wish for it. 40% of states in the United States of America are anti-abortion. 61% of people want this ban to be legal in “all or most cases”. Some states have restricted women’s rights to abortion, making it harder for people to get the proper care that they need, and some have completely banned it, making it much more difficult to get proper
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According to Focus for Health, a study from John Hopkins University concluded that children in foster homes are more likely to get sexually assaulted than their peers who are not in group homes and foster homes. This information brings to light the absolute abuse of power from foster parents. They believe that they can do whatever they want to the poor children in their homes, consequently ruining their kind status in the eyes of the poor children. Thankfully for these horrible people, children are very unlikely to tell any trusted adult that they have been sexually assaulted until they are of legal age to leave the home. These foster guardians are left with the feeling of superiority, therefore doing it repeatedly to different children in their care. These instances are so frequent in the world we live in right now. Children are left with PTSD in some cases, due to the lack of parenting skills that they
Protecting the child and provide an opportunity in which they will live a close to normal life is the goal. But with so many children in foster care and so little workers, children can be over looked. How can a child live in foster care their whole life? “It has been long stated and strongly held belief that foster care must not be a way of life for children, but rather that it is intended as a short-term treatment measure which, for the children’s welfare, must eventuate in their return to their parents or in legal adoption” (Kline,1972,p.51). Children eventually need to be put into long term, permanent homes.
Foster care is one of the oldest social systems, its official implementation dating back to 1909, when the federal government officially suggested that foster homes were the best way to care for children, as opposed to the former system of orphanages and orphan trains. Foster care began as a voluntary way for parents to ensure their children could live a better life, but has since become a largely involuntary way to remove a child from a potentially dangerous situation (Rosenfield et al., 1997). Social workers predate this system, first appearing within the first Charity Organization as “friendly visitors” in 1877 (Segal, 2020). Social workers and foster care have long been intertwined, but social policy dictates much of what the foster care
Foster Youth books often expand on the complexity of psychosocial transformations and trials and tribulations children face in the process of being placed in foster care system, but authors do not incorporate testimonials from the youth. An example of such book is called To the End of June, in which the Cris Bream sheds light on the foster care policies and the meaning of family without expanding on the life history of foster children. In order to be able to understand one of the most vulnerable members within society, foster youth, it is important to have contextual evidence, such as personal testimonies from the youth. Yes, it is significant to understand the statistics and policies that play a role in the foster youth community, but it is vital for stories to be shared in order to humanize the group.
The foster care systems has and will always be a part of society. The idea of a foster care system has always been around, even if it was not properly attained in the past. There has also been other methods to try to find placement for children with no or bad homes, for example the orphanage train, living with widows or living house to house in a community. Now in today’s time, we have an organized system of foster care with two different types of homes for children. For example we have group homes, which is a care facility that houses six or more children at a time.
Have you ever thought about how it feels to be ripped out of the only place that you know as home? To get no explanation of why your parents just did not want you anymore? Not a lot of people think about this. Usually, the only people that do think about this is children that are experiencing or have experienced this problem. The children’s rights website stated that, “On any given day, there are nearly 428,000 children in foster care in the United States.”
In 2020 there were approximately 407,493 children in the United States foster care system, all under the age of 20 (“The AFCARS Report”). Foster care plays a big role in providing homes for children that experience abusive homelives, loss of parents or guardians, or severe financial hardship at home. However, being in foster care takes a toll on many children, due to both previous trauma, and trauma experienced in the foster care system. In order to understand the foster care system, one must research how the system works, how it affects childrens’ physical health, how it affects their mental health, and how being in foster care affects childrens’ chances of being successful.
Foster care is something that America has put a lot of time and effort into to get right. Foster care will be defined as any place where a child is taken from their family of residence or who has no able guardian at birth. These are included but not limited to foster parents, group homes, residentials, and emergency shelters (5). Though we have put time, effort, and money into getting things right, foster care is still a dangerous and traumatizing place for children. Foster care has long been considered a “National Disgrace” due to the influx of missing children, complaints of maltreatment, and even deaths (5).
Common misconceptions associated with being in foster care portray youth in the system as orphans. Youth in foster care are supposedly delinquents, and will perform poorly in academics compared to their peers who are not placed in these institutions. In society, these stereotypes are often pretended, but very little people understand the circumstances and factors the youth in the foster care system are facing. Youth in care are often juxtaposed to their community counterparts, to signify the impact of being a ward of the state, rather than being with a family member.
Who claimed that she was an unfit mother because she was only 17 years old when she had given birth. “I don’t know how one could fully heal from that trauma,” “said the woman, now 41”(Press, T. C. (2022, September 21). Therefore it is very evident that even still today our foster care system is extremely
600,000 children in the US go through the foster system each year. Those are children who were neglected, abused, or orphaned. The foster care system still has its flaws and many children do fall through the cracks. The number of children in the foster care system could continue to increase if abortion in made illegal in the
Foster care is unfavorable to American society, because “according to national statistic 40 to 50 percent of those children will never complete high school. Sixty-six percent
This book raised awareness to authorities on the kind of treatment happening and proposed a change for foster institutions and homes to be monitored. The story began by Ms. Rita, Jennings’s mom, walking Jennings to an orphanage called Home of the Angels. My initial reactions after reading the first chapter was how a mother could just leave her kid with anybody. The book immediately gained my
I am a first-generation college student who aged out of the foster care system. My formative experiences in foster care led me the profession of social work. I earned a BSW (San José State University) and MSW (University of Michigan) with a specialization in social policy and evaluation in the practice area of children and youth in families. During my second year of my MSW studies, I was invited to speak at the White House bill-signing ceremony of the Foster Care Independence Act (FCIA), based on my advocacy work to reform the foster care system. This invitation led to an MSW field practicum at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, where I worked on the implementation of the FCIA.
First, I read the article titled Child Welfare and Foster Care Statistics by The Annie E. Casey Foundation. The article educated me about the foster care system through the use of statistics. I learned from the article that 615,000 kids faced maltreatment and 3 out of 4 of them would face neglect, which is the most common type of maltreatment. 1 out of every 5 of these kids was abused. I also learned that kids ages 1-5 make up the largest percentage of foster kids.
According to a Child Protective Investigation, there are approximately half a million children in the U.S. foster care system, otherwise known as congregate care (group homes and institutions). Children are placed in congregate care when they are found to be in an unsafe environment. Usually children of abuse or maltreatment are placed first (Font, 2015). Out-of-home-care causes increased problems of attachment, behavioral, and psychological disorders in the developing child. Child safety is the primary goal of out-of-home-care; however, maltreatment investigations are still reported in those institutions.