PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 1 July 2001, p. e10
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Children Who Return Home From Foster Care: A 6-Year Prospective
Study of Behavioral Health Outcomes in Adolescence
Received Nov 14, 2000; accepted Feb 22, 2001.

From the * Kempe Children's Center, Department of Pediatrics,
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado, and
the Objective. Returning children to
their biological families after placement in foster care (ie,
reunification) has been prioritized with legislation. Comprehensive
studies of child behavioral health functioning after reunification,
however, have not been conducted. This study examined outcomes for
youth who were reunified after placement in foster care as compared
with youth who did not reunify.
Design. Prospective cohort.
Setting. Children who entered foster care in San Diego,
California, and who remained in foster care for at least 5 months.
Participants. A cohort of 149 ethnically diverse youth, 7 to 12 years old, who entered foster care between May 1990, and October
1991. Seventy-five percent of those interviewed at Time 1 were
interviewed at Time 2 (6 years later).
Outcome Measures. 1) Risk behaviors: delinquent, sexual,
self-destructive, substance use, and total risk behaviors; 2)
Life-course outcomes: pregnancy, tickets/arrests, suspensions, dropping
out of school, and grades; 3) Current symptomatology: externalizing,
internalizing, total behavior problems, and total competence.
Results. Compared with youth who were not reunified,
reunified youth showed more self-destructive behavior (0.15 vs Conclusions. These findings suggest that youth who reunify
with their biological families after placement in foster care have more
negative outcomes than youth who do not reunify. The implications of
these findings for policy and practice are discussed.
School of Social Work, San Diego State University, San Diego,
California.
0.11),
substance use (0.16 vs
0.11), and total risk behavior problem
standardized scores (0.12 vs
0.09). Reunified youth were more likely
to have received a ticket or have been arrested (49.2% vs 30.2%), to
have dropped out of school (20.6% vs 9.4%), and to have received
lower grades (6.5 vs 7.4). Reunified youth reported more current
problems in internalizing behaviors (56.6 vs 53.0), and total behavior problems (59.5 vs 55.7), and lower total competence (41.1 vs 45.0). There were no statistically significant differences between the groups
on delinquency, sexual behaviors, pregnancy, suspensions, or
externalizing behaviors. Reunification status was a significant predictor of negative outcomes in 8 of the 9 regression equations after
controlling for Time 1 behavior problems, age, and gender.
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