NewsFoster Care Children At Much Greater Risk of Physical, Mental Health Problems "No previous research has considered how the mental and physical well-being of children who have spent time in foster care compares to that of children in the general population," says study coauthor Kristin Turney, a UCI associate professor of sociology. "This work makes an important contribution to the research community by showing for the first time that foster care children are in considerably worse health than other children. Our findings also present serious implications for pediatricians by suggesting that foster care placement is a risk factor for health problems in childhood." Published online ahead of print in Pediatrics, the large-scale study is the first to offer health comparisons based on a nationally representative sample of US children. Turney and coauthor Christopher Wildeman, an associate professor of policy analysis and management at Cornell University, analyzed data from the 2011-2012 National Survey of Children's Health. Of the more than 900,000 kids included in the survey, 1.3% were identified as having been in foster care. They were compared to children who hadn't spent time in foster care, those who had been adopted from foster care, and those living in a variety of family arrangements, including single-mother and economically disadvantaged households. Using logistic regression models, researchers found that children who'd been in foster care were: • seven times as likely to experience depression; "This is typically a difficult-to-reach population, so having access to descriptive statistics on their living arrangements, physical well-being and behavior provided an excellent opportunity to help identify the health challenges they face," Turney says. "This study expands our understanding of the mental and physical health of these highly vulnerable children, but we must take a closer look if we are to understand how foster care really affects child well-being." |