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AUSTRALIA
It's time to support our young care
leavers
The recent Senate Community Affairs Reference
Committee report into institutional and out-home care highlighted the
historical failure of state authorities to protect the well-being of
children and young people placed in alternative care. Many of those
children who were in care prior to the 1970s have subsequently
experienced significant emotional and psychological problems including
psychiatric illness, depression, suicide, substance abuse, illiteracy,
impaired relationship skills and marriage breakdown, and incarceration.
The report noted that these poor outcomes could be attributed not only
to the Dickensian brutality and deprivation of many former care homes
and institutions, but also to the failure of the state to properly
prepare young people for leaving care, or to support them with after
care services. It is arguable that child welfare practices and policies
have significantly improved since that time. Nevertheless, little has
changed regarding after care support. Young people leaving “out-of-home”
care remain very vulnerable and disadvantaged. Compared to most young
people, they face particular difficulties in accessing educational,
employment, housing and other developmental and transitional
opportunities. First, they have already experienced physical, sexual or
emotional abuse or neglect before entering care. These experiences may
contribute to ongoing social and emotional disturbances, developmental
delay, and significant behavioural difficulties compared to children and
young people from a supportive family background. Second, state care is
often inadequate involving constant shifts of placement, carers, schools
and workers and sometimes overt abuse including sexual and physical
assault, and emotional abuse. Conversely, children who experience
supportive and stable placements are far more likely to prosper when
they leave care. Third, care leavers can call on little, if any, direct
family support or other community networks to ease their involvement
into independent living. In addition to these major disadvantages,
except in New South Wales, state support is abruptly withdrawn between
16-18 years of age just as those receiving care must negotiate other
difficult life transitions most particularly from school to work.
In contrast, most young people still live at home till
their early 20s, and continue to receive social, practical, emotional
and financial support. “Leaving home” generally involves a long
transition period during which young people may leave and return home
again on three or more occasions. And often there is an intermediate
stage between dependence and independent living during which young
people may reside with extended family, or in a supportive institution
such as a college or hostel. The key factor here is the continued
availability of most family homes as a “safety net” to which young
people can return over a considerable period of time. It is a safety net
which is unavailable to young people leaving care. Graduation from care
should become a far more gradual and flexible process based on
individual levels of maturity and skill development, rather than the
bureaucratic criterion of age. Researchers recommend use of the term
“interdependence” rather than independent living in order to reflect a
notion of shared care and responsibility between young people, their
families, friends, workers, and the broader community. Poor Outcomes for
Care Leavers Research consistently depicts care leavers as being
particularly disadvantaged, and having significantly reduced life
chances. Studies link state care and above average levels of subsequent
homelessness, drug/alcohol use/abuse, poor mental and physical health,
education and employment deficits, poor social support systems, juvenile
prostitution, crime and early parenthood. These poor outcomes reflect a
number of factors including on-going emotional trauma resulting from
experiences of abuse and neglect prior to care, inadequate support
whilst in care, abrupt transitions to adulthood, and lack of guaranteed
on-going financial and other assistance to help facilitate this
transition. Young people leaving care do not currently receive the
ongoing support that a good parent would be expected to provide for
their child.
These concerns suggest that a range of supports and
services are needed to ensure improved outcomes for care leavers. They
include:
the provision of stable and supportive placements with
a positive attitude to education; maintenance of links with either
family members or community supports; a flexible and functional process
for graduating from dependence to interdependence; the active
involvement of young people in the leaving care planning and
decision-making process; the availability of a range of accommodation
options; and ongoing support as required past 18 years of age. In
summary, the state should aspire to provide not only the care of a good
parent but should also try to actively compensate abused and neglected
children for the disadvantages produced by their traumatic pre-care
experiences. We do not dump our own children when they turn 17 or
18-years and begin the transition to independence. Yet, through the
state, we are all substitute parents of those in care. How can we dump
those young people? We are legally and morally bound to assist them.
Philip Mendes Friday
12 November 2004
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=2732
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