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MEETING YOUR CHILDS NEEDS
- Early Childhood Services
-
Caring for Children with Special Health Care Needs
- Adoption of Children with Special Needs
- Advocacy & Finding Your Voice
- Complementary & Alternative Medicine (CAM)
- Finding the Right Childcare
- Foster Care of Children with Special Needs
- Groups & Therapies
- Handling Unawareness
- Hospital Care
- Managing & Coordinating Care
- Safety Precautions for Children with Seizures
- Night Terrors & Nightmares
- Tips to Help Children Sleep
- Transportation & Travel for People with Disabilities
- Common Problems
- Emotional, Behavioral, & Mental Health
- Addressing Bullying
- Social Issues & Opportunities
- Recreation Activities
- Education & Schools
- Adaptive/Assistive Options
- Wish Granting Groups
Foster Care of Children with Special Needs
Understanding Foster Care for Children with Special Needs
- serious medical conditions
- emotional disturbance
- behavioral issues
- medical or genetic risk due to parental substance abuse or mental illness
A Few Key Terms for New or Potential Foster Parents
- Has special health care needs that may include mental, physical, or behavioral challenges.
- Is at risk for developing learning, emotional, behavioral, or physical disabilities in the future.
- Was prenatally exposed to drugs or alcohol.
- Is older than the average age for adoption, generally over 7 years old.
Basic Considerations for Foster Families
General Guidelines for Foster Parents
- Be at least 21 years of age
- Have enough income to meet the basic needs of your household
- Be in good physical, emotional, and mental health
- Have no criminal record for violent crimes, sexual crimes, or crimes against children
- Attend pre-service training and meet the continuing education requirements
Steps to Become a Foster Parent
- Contact a local foster care agency
- Fill out an application to become a licensed foster parent
- Attend the required amount of pre-service training. Additional medical or behavioral training may be needed for children with special needs
- Complete a criminal background check (You and any adult members of your household will be fingerprinted for a national criminal background check)
- Participate in a home study (This will include interviews of all your household members, fire inspection, home safety check, reference checks, credit check, and medical examination report from your doctor)
- Receive a state-issued foster parent license
- A child is placed in your home
Welcoming a Child into Your Home
- Allow the child age-appropriate space and his own belongings.
- Give the child a choice about what to call you. Generally, calling you by your first name is fine, but sometimes a child will want to call you "mom" or "dad." The general rule here is to let the child choose what is comfortable.
- It is important for a foster child to understand the role of a parent as protective and nurturing. Let her know that you are the parent of your household, and that is your role.
- Be aware of racial and cultural differences, and try to incorporate the child's culture into your own.
- It can include anything:
- medical records
- school pictures, special artwork
- awards and photographs
- keepsakes
Advocate for your Foster Child
- Working closely with the caseworker and knowing their supervisor. Make sure they assist you in working with the birth family.
- Knowing your child's court-appointed guardian ad-litem (GAL).
- Understanding and coordinating Medicaid services. Children entering the foster care system are entitled to Medicaid and EPSDT (Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment). States have different ways of managing this care.
- Choosing a primary care doctor for your child. Make sure they accept Medicaid and are available and willing to help advocate for the child.
- Participating in medical appointments, which may include primary medical care, medical subspecialties, dental, mental health care and occupational, physical, and speech therapies.
- Maintaining the foster placement packet and record keeping. Obtain as much information as possible on medical, dental, developmental, immunization, and mental health records, as well as the records from the child's former foster homes.
- Working with the school system, meeting with teachers and therapists, going to IEP (Individual Education Plan) meetings, and special education meetings.
Saying Goodbye to a Child
Resources
Information & Support
For Parents and Patients
National Foster Care & Adoption Directory Search
A database of adoption and post-adoption resources that is searchable by state and region.
Healthy Foster Care America (AAP)
Resources for children and teens in foster care and foster parents; American Academy of Pediatrics.
FosterClub
A national network for youth in foster care with excellent resources, including entering foster care; message board; topical
information about things like foster families, court, your caseworker and the agency, school, friends and relationships, health,
and leaving foster care; and state-by-state information and resources.
Trauma-Informed Patient Education (Children's Hospital of Philadelphia)
Downloadable patient education to help: parents help their children cope, children and teens cope with injury and pain or
dealing with traumatic stress reminders, and siblings cope with their brother's or sister's hospitalization, illness, injury,
and recovery. Also includes workbooks for coping with hospitalization.
What is Child Traumatic Stress? (NCTSN)
Education and questions and answers about child traumatic stress; National Child Traumatic Stress Network.
The Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (CDC)
One of the largest investigations ever conducted to assess associations between childhood maltreatment and later-life health
and well-being; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Services for Patients & Families in Montana (MT)
Service Categories | # of providers* in: | MT | NW | Other states (5) (show) | | NM | NV | OH | RI | UT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Behavioral Therapies | 1 | 9 | 20 | 1 | 31 | 34 | ||||
Early Childhood Mental Health Care | 5 | 5 | 5 | 22 | ||||||
Family Support Services | 13 | 23 | 66 | 15 | 45 | 36 | ||||
Foster/Kinship Care | 2 | 4 | 13 | 3 | 13 | 26 | ||||
Social Workers | 8 | 12 |
For services not listed above, browse our Services categories or search our database.
* number of provider listings may vary by how states categorize services, whether providers are listed by organization or individual, how services are organized in the state, and other factors; Nationwide (NW) providers are generally limited to web-based services, provider locator services, and organizations that serve children from across the nation.
Authors & Reviewers
Author: | Shena McAuliffe, MFA |
Reviewer: | Tina Persels |