TY - JOUR PY - 2024// TI - Life-course trajectories of children through the U. S foster care system JO - Child abuse and neglect A1 - Jones, Dylan A1 - Orsi-Hunt, Rebecca A1 - Kim, Hyunil A1 - Jonson-Reid, Melissa A1 - Drake, Brett SP - e106837 EP - e106837 VL - 153 IS - N2 - OBJECTIVE: Foster care is surprisingly commonplace in the United States, with more than one in twenty children experiencing placement in their lifetimes. Due to the complexity of foster care (e.g. age at contact, length of stay), we still lack a clear idea of how children move through the child welfare system. We pose the question, "do distinct typologies of system trajectories exist that may be used to inform policy analyses?" METHODS: We used child maltreatment reports and foster care case records for all U.S. children born in FY2006 and placed in care between birth and age 15. Using sequence analysis, we classified child-level system trajectories into distinct clusters. Then, we employed multilevel multinomial regression to explore child and system characteristics associated with each.

RESULTS: Three typologies were identified: 1) early-entry-exit, 2) school-age-entry, and 3) late-entry. Early-entry-exit cases typically entered and left foster care before turning three, were frequently adopted, and had little ongoing system contact. School-age-entry children typically entered between ages 5-10, were in care for the shortest amount of time, and mostly exited to reunification. Late-entry children typically entered between ages 9-11, entered with substantial CPS history and remained in care into mid-adolescence.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide the first description of foster care trajectories in the US. Both practice and policy formulation can benefit from these empirically supported descriptions. Using such trajectory typologies, researchers can now explore how trajectories may predict wellbeing outcomes. We discuss how the differences among the typologies may inform identification of service needs and outcomes.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0145-2134 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.106837 ID - ref1 ER -