Making kinship care work.
Farmer, Elaine
Introduction
I'm glad that I'm with my nan and granddad because I know
that I'm not going to be going anywhere because they're
settled down and they're happily married.
Children have always been cared for by relatives and other kin when
their parents are unable to care for them. Since the Children Act 1989,
which stressed the importance of retaining children within their family
and social networks where possible, there has been a steady, if slow,
rise in the numbers of children in care in England who are officially
fostered with family and friends, although there is considerable
variation by local authority. The proportion increased nationally from
six per cent of looked after children in 1989 to 12 per cent in 2008
(Department of Health, 1991; Department for Education and Skills, 2008).
Other children cared for by kin, who do not appear in these figures, may
still be known to local authorities and may be supported through the use
of residence or special guardianship orders or payments for children in
need. The children about whom least is known are those living with kin
without the involvement of the child welfare system (see, for example,
Richards, 2001).
Recent policy developments mean that this steady rise may become a
surge. Special guardianship orders (which provide greater security for
kin-placed children than residence orders without the finality of
adoption) have been introduced. The Adoption and Children Act 2002
requires that relatives have to be considered when decisions are being
taken about adoption, and under the Public Law Outline the potential of
care by kin will need to be considered before care proceedings are
brought and included in the initial care plan put to the court. The
Children and Young Persons Act 2008 further encourages the use of kin
care, so that where it promotes a child's welfare, local
authorities will have to give preference to placing a child with a
relative.
Since the use of kinship care is likely to increase sharply over
the next few years, there is a pressing need to consider the evidence
base about how well kinship care works and what is needed to maintain
these placements. At the time the study reported here was commissioned
there had been very little research on kin placements in the UK,
although pioneers in this area had laid an important foundation of
knowledge (see, for example, Broad, 1999, 2001; Broad et al, 2001;
Pitcher, 1999, 2002; Flynn, 2002; Doolan et al, 2004). Nonetheless,
these studies were mostly small in scale and did not systematically
address the question of children's outcomes. The research base is
now much stronger with, in addition to our project, several studies now
being available (Aldgate and McIntosh, 2006; Sinclair et al, 2007; Hunt
et al, 2008).
Research methods
Our study, which was funded by the Department for Children, Schools
and Families (DCSF), used a catch-up prospective design and was based on
a cross-section of children in England who were in kin and unrelated
foster care placements on a set date, chosen so that the placements
could be followed up for a period of the next two years. One design
limitation is that such point-in-time sampling over-samples long-stay
and under-represents short-stay cases. Before the sample selection date
the children had already been in placement for varying periods of time,
which were fairly similar for the two groups. Between a quarter and a
third of the children had been in placement for under two years, half
for between two and six years, while between a fifth and a quarter had
lived with their carers for over six years.
The research was conducted in four local authorities in England,
three of which had sizeable black and minority ethnic (BME) populations.
Each local authority provided a list of all their children who were
living in an unrelated foster placement during July in our selection
year or who were with kin under foster placement regulations, residence
orders or supported under the section 17 children in need provisions,
although it is likely that the records on the last two groups of
children were less robust. All BME children were included, to facilitate
comparison by ethnicity, and the sample was stratified by age so that
the children in the case file sample reflected the age groupings of the
full cohort. Only four cases were not included in the sample because
parents withheld permission. From the list of 2,240 children provided, a
stratified random sample of 270 children was selected by the
researchers, just over half of whom (53%) were placed with family or
friends and just under half (47%) with unrelated foster carers.
At the time the sample was drawn, just under half the children in
each group (kin and unrelated foster care) were under ten and most (69%)
were on care orders or interim care orders in each setting. Twenty per
cent of the children in the sample were from BME backgrounds and there
were slightly more girls (54%) than boys (46%).
The case files of the 270 children were reviewed and interviews
were undertaken with a sub-sample of 32 family and friends carers and a
number of the social workers responsible for these children (16), as
well as with parents (6) and the children themselves (16), using a
semi-structured interview format and some standardised measures. The
interview sub-sample, from three of the authorities, comprised all
carers whose contact details were available. Only three did not agree to
participate. There were proportionately more grandparents (66% v 45%)
and fewer aunts and uncles (22% v 32%) and friends (12% v 18%) in the
interview sub-sample as compared with the case file sample. It is likely
that the interview sub-sample is weighted towards more stable families
and to those whose placements were still intact. All the social workers
still in post, parents and children (aged 7+) relating to the 32 cases
who agreed to be interviewed were included.
Case file information has certain limitations. Some data are not
routinely recorded on files and, when they are, there will be some
missing data on certain issues. In addition, case file records are by
definition the social workers' constructions of events.
Nonetheless, we found them to be a rich source of information about the
children, carers and placements and they allow access to the whole range
of the population under study, which is not possible when only
interviews are undertaken. This study aimed to capitalise on the
strengths of these two sources of information.
In this article, the characteristics of the children placed with
family and friends and their carers will be described, as will the
services provided and needed and the impact of the placements on kin
carers and the strains they experienced. Finally, the implications for
policy and practice will be considered (see also Farmer and Moyers,
2008; Farmer, 2009a). All the names have been changed to preserve
anonymity.
First we consider how the children placed with kin compared to
those with non-kin foster carers.
Child characteristics
Some US research has suggested that children with fewer problems go
to kin carers (Iglehart, 1994; Chipungu and Everett, 1998; Beeman et al,
2000; Grogan-Kaylor, 2000) but when we compared the children in kin
placements with those with non-kin foster carers we found this was not
the case in England.
Indeed, the children in the two kinds of placements were remarkably
similar in terms of their characteristics, their past behavioural problems and the kinds of adversities, including child abuse and
neglect, which they had experienced prior to placement (Farmer, 2009b).
The main differences were that children with multiple health problems
were more often placed with unrelated foster carers (43%) than with
family or friends (21%); those who had a parent who had been in care
themselves during childhood were also more likely to be placed with
unrelated foster carers than with kin. In addition, it was interesting
to find that children from BME backgrounds were significantly more
likely to be placed with unrelated foster carers than with kin (see also
Sykes et al, 2002). This contrasts with the situation in the USA where
African-American and, to a lesser extent, Hispanic children are
disproportionately represented among those cared for by relatives or
friends (see, for example, Hegar and Scannapieco, 1999). Since most of
the kin placements in our study were made because kin initiated the
placement or were already caring for the children, it may be that BME
relatives are less successful in coming to the attention of social
workers in the UK when decisions about care are being made or that fewer
are in a position to provide care. It is also possible that BME
relatives care for considerable numbers of children without having
contact with local authorities or courts and without any corresponding
financial or other support.
The parental difficulties that had led to children being cared for
away from home were also very much the same. Similar proportions of the
children had a parent who had died (11% v 12%), experienced domestic
violence (52% both), had mental health difficulties (44% v 45%) or had
misused drugs or alcohol (60% v 51%).
Once in placement, the children living with kin showed similar
levels of behavioural and emotional difficulty (66%) to those placed
with unrelated foster carers (71%). For over half (52%) the children in
both groups these difficulties were at a level that, in the
researchers' view, required remedial help from a specialist service
such as Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). So it can
be seen that there were few differences between the children who were
placed with family and friends and those with unrelated foster carers,
and that a good number of the children with kin presented quite
challenging behaviour.
How then did the carers in the two kinds of placement compare?
The characteristics of the kin carers
Among the family and friends carers, grandparents were the largest
group (45%), followed by aunts and uncles (32%) and friends (18%). A
small number of children were cared for by other relatives such as
cousins or siblings. Two-thirds of the children were placed with
maternal relatives and a third with paternal. By follow-up, two-thirds
of the kin carers (67%) had been assessed and approved as foster carers
for the children (while for 20 there was no information about this). The
kin carers who had not been approved as foster carers by follow-up
included those who had been granted residence orders or were supported
by means of section 17 children in need payments.
It emerged that kin carers were significantly more disadvantaged
than the unrelated foster carers. Significantly more were lone carers
(27% v 14%), the majority of whom were lone women and they lived, at
least initially, in overcrowded conditions (1) (35% v 4%). In addition,
many more kin carers had a disability or chronic illness (31% v 17%) and
experienced financial hardship (75% v 13%) (see also Dubowitz et al,
1993; Iglehart, 1994; Hegar and Scannapieco, 1999). Given the profile of
kin carers and the circumstances in which they come to care for
children, these disadvantages are not altogether surprising.
Health difficulties
Almost a third (31%) of the family and friends carers had severe
health difficulties, considerably more than was the case with stranger
foster carers. Older grandparents sometimes had a number of health
problems and a few needed daily assistance to manage their lives, even
before they took on their grandchildren. For example, Mr Leigh was a
grandfather who had had four heart attacks, suffered from angina and had
breathing difficulties. His wife had rheumatoid arthritis. Mrs Clark had
a heart condition, hypertension, glaucoma and chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease. Her husband, the children's grandfather, had
diabetes and hemiplegia. A number of these carers only coped because
their adult children lived nearby and gave them daily assistance.
Children who moved to live with elderly grandparents when young
often later experienced their grandparents' ill health and
occasionally their death. While this might be considered a disadvantage
of some kinship care placements, the children usually moved to live with
another relative, which no doubt assisted in the continuity of their
care and probably helped them to deal with their loss. Indeed, it was
not uncommon for families to have given considerable thought as to who
might care for the children if the current relative carers could no
longer continue. Such contingency plans usually involved another family
member, such as an aunt, who was already well known to the children.
Overcrowding
There was overcrowding in over a third (35%) of the placements with
family and friends but in few of those with unrelated carers (4%).
Unlike unrelated foster carers, who plan when to take children and are
assessed as to how many they are allowed to foster, kin take in children
with no such plans and often at short notice. Some go to grandparents
who are living in accommodation only just big enough for them alone and
others join aunts and uncles with large families where there is little
extra space for a group of siblings.
Sometimes kin were able to sort out the difficulties themselves,
moving to larger rented accommodation or exchanging houses with another
family member. Other families made do with what they had. For example,
an uncle and aunt had five children when they took their niece into
their three-bedroom house, so the four boys shared a room as did the two
girls; a grandmother in a one-bedroom maisonette, who was joined by her
two grandchildren, ended up sleeping on the settee. There were sometimes
mounting tensions and pressure on relationships as the lack of space
caused arguments to erupt. In one such situation, a paternal uncle and
his partner, who lived in a one-bedroom flat, accommodated their
ten-year-old nephew who had been excluded from school and was aggressive
and uncooperative. Not surprisingly, this placement disrupted after only
two months.
The carers were often imaginative in making enough space for the
children. In one case the grandparents had a two-bedroom house and
looked after their three grandchildren, so they partitioned one bedroom
and used one of the living rooms as another. It was also remarkable how
flexible families were prepared to be. In one family, one of the
grandsons slept in their caravan in order to have his own bedroom.
Similarly, a friend couple acquired a second-hand summerhouse for their
son to use as his own space, as there was friction when he was sharing
his bedroom with the much younger boy who they were looking after.
Local authority responses to these difficulties were varied. In two
cases children's services or the housing department supplied
financial help to build an extension onto the house to provide enough
space, but in another two cases funding for an extension was refused.
Many of the kin carers lived in council housing. While social
workers were sometimes active in putting pressure on housing departments
to provide more suitable accommodation, more could be done if kin carers
were made a priority group for re-housing.
Financial issues
Most but not all the kin carers in the study received some
financial help from children's services but the allowances were
usually lower than those for unrelated foster carers. After the landmark
court decision known as the Munby judgment (FLR, 2002), which clearly
stated that local authorities should not discriminate against family and
friends by paying lower fostering allowances, local authorities tended
to pay kin foster carers the basic fostering allowance only, without the
additional payments for clothing, holidays, birthdays and Christmas that
are routinely paid to unrelated foster carers. Kin carers looking after
children who were subject to residence orders and in receipt of an
allowance were often paid still less (residence orders are court orders
which determine who a child lives with). Special guardianship orders
were introduced after the conclusion of the fieldwork so we do not have
information about payments under them. These orders, as previously
noted, provide greater security for kin-placed children than residence
orders without the finality of adoption.
Given the low incomes of kin, many of whom were on income support
or pensions, and the low levels of foster care and residence order
allowances paid to them, it was not surprising that there were frequent
reports on file that carers were suffering financial hardship. It was
particularly difficult when there were periods during which carers were
not paid or were paid at rates well below the fostering allowance, as
for example during the first months or even years of placement. Section
17 payments (paid out of children's services' budgets for
children in need) tended to be unreliable and relatives made many
telephone calls to social workers to try to get payments made.
A few carers had to involve others as advocates before they were
paid their full allowance. This friend carer, who was looking after two
children, involved a solicitor and a voluntary organisation:
After I put my official complaint in and they received letters from
my solicitor, I suddenly got this letter saying that changes have been
made to the caring relatives' allowances and it's been
reviewed and it's been put up, and it's been put now to, from
194 [pounds sterling] I was getting, to [pounds sterling] 554 a
fortnight.
Some of those who received an allowance felt that they had been
able to maintain their previous standard of living overall, although
they were stretched to manage holidays, school trips or activities for
the children, so that occasional one-off payments to help with these
items would have made a difference. However, other carers made it clear
that they were suffering financial hardship and had had to take out
loans for essential items.
In addition, a number of carers, when talking about finance, said
they had not had an evening out for many years. For example, one single
carer said:
They've been with me just over a thousand days; I've had
15 nights off, 15 trips out and actual nights when they haven't
been here have been about six.
This was partly because of the difficulty of paying for approved
childsitters who were expensive, plus the additional costs of going out.
A particular problem arose in relation to replacement of items that the
children destroyed. In addition, some kin carers were in debt, having
paid for their court costs, for a residence order or in earlier care
proceedings.
Those who knew a little about the allowances for unrelated foster
carers were aware that kin were paid at lower rates:
And all I've ever been told is, caring relatives aren't
entitled to this, caring relatives aren't entitled to that, they
don't get no holiday grants, you don't get no clothing grants,
you don't get pocket money, they don't get extra money at
Christmas or on their birthday, you don't get any support
whatsoever of any kind. You don't even get a social worker of your
own.
Social workers were generally more willing to provide help with
start-up costs for bedding, bunk beds or clothing when children first
arrived to get the kin family up and running (see also Farmer and
Parker, 1991; Hunt et al, 2008). If relatives started to care for a baby
they might receive a pram, car seat or cot. Help with school uniforms
was also given sparingly:
I says to him, basic outline of what he needs is going to be about
150 [pounds sterling]. 'Oh um, caring relatives don't get
clothing grants,' and I said, 'He needs that for secondary
school ... you need to start helping me out a bit.' The social
worker went off anyway and discussed it with the manager and they moaned
and moaned about it. So they come back to me with: 'We're
going to give you 75 [pounds sterling],' but two-and-a-half years
on I'm still waiting for it.
A number of kin carers gave up their jobs to look after the
children or changed from day to night-time shifts, leading to a loss of
income. However, they did not complain about this, seeing it as a
necessary sacrifice to look after the children. They did, however, talk
about how tired it made them, when a full day with the children was
followed by a night shift.
Contact
Children who were placed with relatives had higher levels of
contact with aunts, uncles and cousins and, when they were living with
paternal relatives, with their fathers, than those in non-kin foster
care. Unsurprisingly, children placed with paternal relatives were more
likely to maintain contact with their fathers and those placed with
maternal relatives with their mothers.
However, difficult relationships between kin carers and the
children's parents or other family members emerged for over half
(54%) of the family and friends carers but for far fewer (16%) unrelated
foster carers. Some parents were resentful that a relative had taken
over the care of their children. Other parents were actively hostile to
the kin carers and a few made threats or actually attacked them, while
others made false allegations against the carers or undermined the
placement in other ways. Occasionally, two sides of the extended family
were in conflict about who should be caring for the children.
In such situations of conflict, family and friends carers often
wanted the protection of care orders and the involvement of
children's services in order to maintain adequate boundaries around
contact between the children, their parents and/or other members of the
family. In practice, social work staff supervised contact in far fewer
of the supervised kin carer placements (25%) than was the case in
unrelated care (55%). Instead, kin carers supervised contact in
two-fifths of the placements with supervised contact, something that
unrelated foster carers undertook more rarely. It is notable that there
were significantly more disruptions in kin care when contact was not
supervised at all.
The only time when contact with parents was terminated was as a
result of advice from psychiatrists or other specialists. In many other
cases more active management of contact by social workers was needed so
that children did not receive confusing messages from parents about
their ability to care for them and so that placements were not
undermined. It is important that consideration is given to limiting or
terminating contact when it is clearly detrimental to children.
Impact of children on kin carers
Many of the carers had the satisfaction of seeing children flourish
and thrive in their care. They also felt secure in the knowledge that
they were providing an essential service to their family or friends, and
that they had avoided the need for the children to go into care and face
an uncertain future (see also Broad et al, 2001). However, the positives
in caring for these children were bought at a high cost for many carers.
While ordinary foster carers plan to foster and this suits their
life stage, for kin the idea of looking after someone else's
children is neither planned nor expected. As a result, they made
sacrifices and incurred losses to take the children. Several relatives
gave up their jobs to look after the children, reducing their income and
their pension entitlement. Ten per cent of the carers found that their
marriage came under severe strain (2) as a result of these abrupt
changes in their circumstances and the complications of an
'interrupted life cycle' (Crumbley and Little, 1997; Burnette,
1999), in which retirement was indefinitely postponed and the task of
child rearing taken up again.
Moreover, older relative carers could feel socially dislocated as
they did not fit with parents of the child's age or with their own
friends who no longer looked after dependent children. Some too had
other caring responsibilities for their own elderly parents or a sick
partner (see also Pitcher, 2002). Grandparent carers were sometimes
struggling with feelings of loss, shame or guilt about the difficulties
of their adult children which had necessitated the children being
removed from them or because they had been unable to take on a full
sibling group and one or more of the children had been adopted by
strangers (see also Minkler et al, 1992; Strawbridge et al, 1997). They
sometimes also provided a great deal of support to one of the parents
but knew that ultimately they had to put the children first. Others were
still grieving for the death of the children's parents, and this
could interfere with their capacity to parent effectively. In many of
these areas social workers or other professionals could assist carers.
Unlike experienced non-kin foster carers who become adept at
eliciting services (Farmer et al, 2004), many kin carers did not know
what services existed, were reluctant to ask for help and when they did
so were often told that as relatives they were not entitled to it, which
effectively disarmed them. Indeed, it could be argued that while being a
non-related foster carer is a source of pride, being a kin carer may be
experienced as occupying a rather more ambiguous status (Crumbley and
Little, 1997).
Services
Social work visits to the children and the carers in kin placements
were at slightly but not significantly lower levels than in unrelated
foster care. In terms of overall levels of service and support from
children's services, (3) however, significantly more kin carers
received low levels of service (69%) as compared with unrelated foster
carers (47%). Particularly high levels of support had sometimes been
needed at the start of the kin placements (see also Pitcher, 2002).
Two-fifths of the children in each group who showed any emotional
or behavioural problems received some assistance. However, between a
third (38% in unrelated care) and almost half (47% with kin) of the
children with the most serious difficulties (where the researchers
judged that they required specialist input) were not receiving any
intervention.
Both groups of carers therefore lacked services. However, a major
difference between the two groups was that very few of the kin carers
had a family placement worker, whereas almost all the unrelated foster
carers did. In addition, few had access to training or to foster carer
groups, which enables non-kin foster carers to give individual support
and advice to each other (see, for example, Farmer et al, 2004; Sinclair
et al, 2004).
Unmet needs
Parenting children whose previous experiences included domestic
violence, parental conflict, abuse, neglect, parental mental health
problems and substance misuse was very different for kin carers than
bringing up their own children. The many gaps in services for the
children with kin carers no doubt partly reflect the paucity of
specialist provision in some areas. However, it also emerged that
children's social workers (unlike family placement workers) were
often unaware of the range of resources that can assist in sustaining
placements.
The most pressing need was for counselling and specialist help for
children with severe and persistent behavioural and emotional
difficulties. Kin carers also required adequate financial payments to
cover the costs of caring for the children, including assistance with
exceptional costs such as caring for children with acute health or
behavioural problems, without which some carers were in situations of
severe financial hardship. In addition, a few children clearly did not
understand why they were living with family or friends and not with
their parents and blamed either the kin carer or social worker. It is
important that professionals ensure that clear explanations have been
given to children about the reasons for the placement and that kin
carers are given advice on how to address this issue with children as
the placement progresses. In many cases, kin carers appeared to have
avoided dealing with this question. For a few children, life story work
(see, for example, Shah and Argent, 2006) was needed to help them to
come to terms with their past.
At the same time, it appeared that not all the parents had either
been clearly told or accepted that they would not be able to resume care
of the children. A number of children, too, lacked a clear understanding
of the plans for their future (see also Aldgate and McIntosh, 2006).
Work with parents and children to ensure that they are clear about
future plans is clearly vital. This might also go some way towards
dealing with the fear of many kin carers that the children will be taken
from them. Some children would also have benefited from advice about how
to explain to their friends that they lived with kin. These are areas of
practice with family and friends that would benefit from more attention.
A range of services would have assisted kin carers. There was a
clear need for support with contact issues when there were high levels
of conflict or parents were undermining the placement. Many carers would
have welcomed help or training to understand and manage the behaviours
of the children they were looking after. While the idea of training may
lack appeal for some kin carers, they might be engaged by building on
their desire to develop their skills and knowledge in the rather
different situation of bringing up someone else's children, some of
whom have experienced considerable adversities (National Foster Care
Association, 2000a; Flynn, 2001; Doolan et al, 2004). Practical help
with the caring task was also needed. Only eight per cent of the kin
carers received regular respite care. There were a good number of
situations where regular support or respite care might have provided a
much needed break for the carers and lessened some of the stress of
caring (see Department for Education and Skills, 2007).
The interviews revealed that access to groups of kin carers would
have been welcomed by some carers and might have lessened their sense of
isolation as well as enabled links to be made with other kin carers
(see, for example, Pitcher, 2002). Financial help for activities for the
children, for school uniforms and for child sitting to allow for
occasional evenings out was also often needed. A few kin carers clearly
needed counselling in their own right, especially in coming to terms
with unresolved issues of loss and guilt related to the difficulties of
their adult children that had led to the children requiring their care.
Carers with health problems or who had caring responsibilities for their
elderly relatives sometimes also needed help from adult services, a link
that was often lacking.
Outcomes and strain
We made a researcher rating of the quality of the placement that
was based on all the available evidence from children's case files.
This rating was made independently by the two researchers and focused on
how far placements met the needs of the children. Placements were rated
as being either a satisfactory placement for the child overall
(satisfactory or good-quality placement) or a placement where concerns
had been expressed about the child or the placement, or where there was
other evidence that the placement was negative for the child
(problematic or poor-quality placement). Concerns included anxieties by
social workers or others (for example, other family members, teachers or
health visitors) about the well-being of the child in the placement,
concerns about the carers' parenting skills or their ability to
protect the child adequately, or other indications that the situation
was negative for the child (for example, if they were being bullied by
other children in the placement). Where the quality of the placement
varied over time, the rating was made in relation to the situation at
follow-up.
Even though the kin carers were considerably more disadvantaged
than the non-kin foster carers, there was no statistically significant
difference in the ratings of placement quality between the two groups of
children. Sixty-six per cent of the children placed with kin and 73 per
cent of those in unrelated foster care were rated as having satisfactory
placements, while 34 per cent of the children with kin and 27 per cent
of those in unrelated foster carer were considered to be in more
problematic placements. However, the placements of poor quality with
family and friends lasted significantly longer than those in unrelated
care, probably because of a lack of social work monitoring or because
different thresholds for intervention were applied to kin care
placements.
In addition, similar proportions of kin (18%) and unrelated foster
placements (17%) had disrupted by the end of the follow-up period (see
also Sinclair et al, 2004; Oosterman et al, 2007). Although a higher
number of placements in unrelated foster care had ended by follow-up,
this was principally due to planned moves to other placements,
reflecting the much higher numbers of these placements that were from
the outset intended to be short term.
By follow-up, the placements with kin had lasted on average longer
(4 years 9 months) than those with unrelated foster carers (3 years 11
months), although the difference was not statistically significant.
However, nearly half (45%) of the kin carers struggled to cope with the
children in their care, significantly more than was the case with
unrelated foster carers (30%). There were many reports on file of
relatives who were at breaking point and of carers worn down by the
child's behaviour.
Although both types of placement more often disrupted when carers
were struggling to cope, the disruption levels were higher among the
strained unrelated carers. As a result, many more of the placements
where kin were under strain were continuing at follow-up (71% v 48% in
unrelated care). Other research has also shown that kin carers,
especially grandparents, tend to be in poorer physical and mental health
than non-related foster carers (for example, Hegar and Scannapieco,
1999; Minkler et al, 2000) and experience considerable stress
(Fuller-Thompson et al, 1997). Moreover, we found that when kin carers
were under strain placement quality was poorer.
Attitudes to kin carers
We detected a general attitude among social workers that kin should
be able to manage without help (see also Stogdon, 1999), which may in
part be fuelled by ideas about the strengths of relative placements
where children are already known to the carers, as well as by attempts
to contain the costs of these placements. Such attitudes are probably
also underpinned by a reluctance to help family members to do what many
think should be done out of a sense of kinship affection and obligation
(O'Brien, 2000). There may also be issues about giving more to
relatives to support children than is given to parents. In addition,
policy makers and managers often have concerns that providing adequate
support or recompense to kin will open the floodgates and be
unmanageable (Tapsfield, 2001). These kind of views are in urgent need
of wider debate since it seems unlikely that adequate services will be
provided to family and friends without a major change in attitudes to
them.
Conclusion
In the UK, in the absence of a strong policy steer at national
level on family and friends care, individual local authorities have
developed policy and practice in a variety of ways (Greef, 1999; Flynn,
2001; Tapsfield, 2001; Broad and Skinner, 2005). Since some authorities
have developed well-articulated policies and practice using research
evidence (see, for example, Doolan et al, 2004; Broad and Skinner,
2005), there is much that authorities can learn from each other about
policies and arrangements that appear to facilitate good practice (see,
for example, Tapsfield, 2001; Wheal, 2001). However, such developments
are only likely to have an impact if family and friends care is steered
and prioritised at the highest levels within each local authority. A
recent study (Sinclair et al, 2007) found large differences between
local authorities in their use of kin care and even greater differences
between teams within individual authorities. Our study also showed wide
variability in outcomes by local authority.
The Government has signalled its intention to provide a 'new
framework for family and friends' (Department for Education and
Skills, 2007). Local authorities will be required to have transparent
policies about the support they offer to kin carers, which will be
subject to inspection. These developments will need to be underpinned by
changes in social work education and post-qualifying and in-service
training to highlight the contribution and particular needs of kinship
carers and the approaches to them that are most beneficial (see, for
example, Waldman and Wheal, 1999; National Foster Care Association,
2000a, 2000b; Flynn, 2001). Training in ways of working with family
networks and in mediation would also be useful (see, for example,
O'Brien, 2000, 2001), as would the further development of social
work approaches which build on kin families' strengths and work in
partnership with them.
At present, the uneasy position of kinship care on the boundary
between the public and private spheres of caring leads to a situation
where some kin carers struggle to care for needy children with low
levels of support and financial help. In a situation of resource
constraint, kinship placements are readily targeted as an area of
practice where cost savings can be made. Increasing pressure to make kin
placements in this context could lead to a worsening situation and
renewed attempts to trim costs. For example, the number of special
guardianship orders is rising, with financial assistance discretionary
and subject to review, and monitoring limited or non-existent. Our
finding that some poor-quality kin placements went on for a long time
would suggest a need for caution and an emphasis on good initial
assessments. Moreover, these increased pressures could also mean that
less suitable or committed kin carers are approved and standards might
fall (Sinclair, 2005).
Placements with kin generally ensure that children thrive, are well
nurtured and remain connected to their roots. These placements deliver
good quality and make a major contribution to stability for children who
cannot live with their parents. This is a real achievement given the
disadvantages faced by kinship carers. At present, kin carers'
commitment and willingness to continue against considerable odds benefit
the children they look after, but the good outcomes for these children
are sometimes achieved at the expense of the kin carers themselves. In
addition, the recovery of some children placed with kin is being
compromised by lack of services. There is therefore a major imperative
to make changes to ensure that kin carers do receive adequate
remuneration and support and the needs of the children they look after
are met.
Acknowledgements
I am very grateful to Caroline Thomas and Dr Carolyn Davies from
the Department for Children, Schools and Families for their support and
assistance with this research, and to Sue Moyers, my co-researcher.
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[c] Elaine Farmer 2009
(1) A researcher rating of 'definitely overcrowded' was
made if there was evidence on the file of overcrowding (eg social
workers actively seeking alternative housing for families because the
families needed more room after they had taken the child or children to
live with them or if overcrowding was mentioned in the review minutes).
This applied to 22 per cent of kin carer families but to only three per
cent of non-related carers. A rating of 'probable
overcrowding' was made when information on the file suggested
overcrowding but no specific reference was made to this (eg a
grandmother living in a two-bedroom flat who was taking care of two of
her grandchildren) and this was true for 13 per cent of kin carers but
only one per cent of non-kin foster carers. There was no evidence of
overcrowding on the file for 65 per cent of kin carers but there was for
almost all (96%) of the non-kin carers.
(2) Coded when severe marital strain or a report of marriage
breakdown was noted in case files.
(3) The researchers made an overall rating of the placement support
or assistance offered to carers and children by children's services
(excluding financial support) using all the information recorded on the
children's case files. The rating had four levels, which were
defined as follows: (1) well-supported placements: children had an
allocated social worker and carers had access to training and carer
support groups; children had access to help if they needed and wanted it
(eg psychological help, life-story work, keeping safe courses). If there
were difficulties in the placement for whatever reason (eg illness in
the family), extra help was provided (eg respite care, nursery places,
supervision of contact); (2) some support given: children and carers
received many, but not all, of the support services detailed above; (3)
little support given: children and carers received few of the support
services detailed above; (4) no support given: children and carers
received none of the support services detailed above.
Elaine Farmer is Professor of Child and Family Studies in the
School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK