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Article Abstract  

Children Cared for by Relatives: What Do We Know About Their Well-Being?


  Author: Amy Billing, Jennifer Ehrle, Katherine Kortenkamp
Publisher: Urban Institute
Publication: New Federalism National Survey of America's Families, Series B, No. B-46
Document Date:                  May 01, 2002
Category: Parenthood/Childrearing > Foster Homes/Parenting
Related Categories:
Children > Child Behaviour
Children > Child Development
Children > Child Welfare
Children > Emotional Development
Children > Health (fetal addictions, FAS, malnutrition)
Education > Academic Performance/Achievement
Family Economics > Economic Hardship
Family Relations > Parent/Adult Child Relations
Parenthood/Childrearing > Nonparental Care
Parenthood/Childrearing > Parental Absence
 

This paper presents evidence that children who live with relatives have significantly worse outcomes in terms of emotional and behavioural development, school achievement and involvement, health, and adult interaction than those who live with their parents.  However, the authors suggest that this may be attributed, at least in part, to the economic hardship faced by many kinship care families, and not entirely to separation from parents.

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