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Journal Article

Citation

Tanguy M, Rousseau D, Roze M, Duverger P, Nguyen S, Fanello S. Arch. Pediatr. 2015; 22(11): 1129-1139.

Vernacular Title

Parcours et devenir de 128 enfants admis avant l'âge de quatre ans en pouponnière sociale.

Affiliation

UFR de médecine, département universitaire de santé publique, 1, rue haute-de-reculée, 49045 Angers cedex 01, France. Electronic address: sefanello@chu-angers.fr.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.arcped.2015.07.016

PMID

26454760

Abstract

AIM: The purpose of this study was to determine the institutional trajectory and future of young children in child welfare.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A catamnestic study - based on data from the child welfare office in Maine and Loire, France, from 1994 to 2001 - was conducted by a child psychiatrist and a psychologist. Medical, judicial, and educational data (development, health, pathways in child protection services) were collected and analyzed regarding the status of these children 15 years later, adding information gathered by interviewing the child welfare and foster family consultant.

RESULTS: We included 128 children admitted to the child welfare office before 4 years of age. Admission to the child welfare system suffers from care delays (a mean of 13.1 months between the first child protection referral and placement) with an average entry age of 17 months and frequent cases of child abuse (e.g., seven Silverman syndrome cases). The physical and mental health status of these children was poor (poorly monitored pregnancies, prematurity, low birth weight). More than one third of the children had growth failure at admission, with catch-up in half of the cases. The average length of stay in the child welfare system was 13.2±4.6 years. At the end of the follow-up, there were specific measures to safeguard vulnerable adults: "young adult" (24 cases), "major protection" (eight cases) and "disabled living allowance" (nine cases). One hundred and sixteen children suffered from psychiatric disorders at entry and 98 at the end. The general functioning of children as assessed by the Children's Global Assessment Scale (CGAS) showed a statistically significant improvement. One out of two young adults showed problems integrating socially with chaotic pathways: many foster placements, unsuccessful return to the family, and academic failures.

CONCLUSION: The clinical situations of children in the child welfare office and their long-term progression confirm the importance of this public health problem. Although the measures can greatly improve their physical and psychological recovery, with evidence of thriving, this remains limited: only a few of these children are well integrated socially and academically.


Language: fr

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