COMMENTS

  1. 10 Things that Scientific Research Says about Open Adoption

    Here are 10 important facts and statistics about open adoption and its benefits for everyone in the adoption triad: 1. Today, closed adoptions are all but extinct; it's estimated that only 5 percent of modern adoptions are closed. 2. That means that 95 percent of today's adoptions involve some level of openness, whether they are mediated ...

  2. Bridging the Divide: Openness in Adoption and Post-adoption

    The Existing Empirical Evidence. Although researchers have begun to examine empirically the benefits and consequences of open adoption (e.g., Berry, 1993; Berry, Dylla, Barth, & Needell, 1998; Grotevant et al., 1994; Von Korff, Grotevant, & McRoy, 2006), data remain scarce and the existing research has often yielded inconsistent results.For example, Blanton and Deschner (1990) reported that ...

  3. Open Adoption: A Research-Based Literature Review and New Data

    Though by now there exists an extensive literature about open adoption , discussion of its effects based on research with families involved is in its early stages. This analysis reviews six empirical studies of open adoption. It also presents data from two new databases , one involving in-depth interviews with 32 adoptive and 16 associated ...

  4. Open Adoption

    Open adoption is not shared parenting. Parental rights of the birth family are terminated, and the adoptive parents are the legal parents and the ones responsible for the care of the child who has been adopted. Open adoption was not always so commonplace, however. For much of the 20 th century, most private, unrelated adoptive placements were ...

  5. Improving Open Adoptions

    Improving Open Adoptions. Adoption Advocate No. 174 - This article covers what openness means in the context of adoption and how adoptive parents can, through openness, help adoptees integrate and heal. Lori Holden, adoptive parent, author, speaker, and podcaster, proposes three shifts adoptive parents can make—to better focus on what really ...

  6. Understanding Open Adoption

    The children of open adoption do not have higher self-esteem than those in closed adoptions, he observed. For children in each group, self-esteem is about the same, his research found. He stressed that more research is needed to assess the impact of open adoption on adolescents. (The research he did with McRoy studies children up to age 12.)

  7. Adoption, Communication, and Family Networks: Current Research and

    Open adoption practices have become normative in domestic adoption (H. D. Grotevant, Citation 2020). ... Adoption research tends to focus on adoptive parents' experiences (Colaner & Horstman, Citation 2021). More research is needed to give voice to birth family experiences, particularly birth father experiences, which are largely ...

  8. Open Adoption

    Openness in adoption has evolved over the last 25 years because of the input from adult adoptees and research by mental health professionals. Longitudinal adoption research has shown that open adoption is better for adoptees, adoptive parents, and birth parents.

  9. Open adoption: a review of the literature with recommendations to

    As openness in adoption is still in its infancy, there has not been much systematic research on open adoption. This practice involves anything from sharing non-identifying information through an intermediary to regular face-to-face fully identifying information-sharing and contact between all members of the adoption triangle - the birthparent/s, the adoptive parents and the adoptees.

  10. Open adoption: adoptive parents' reactions two decades later

    To understand the impacts of different open adoption arrangements, a qualitative descriptive study using a snowball sample of 44 adoptive parents throughout New England began in 1988. Every seven years these parents who adopted infants in open adoptions have participated in tape-recorded interviews to explore their evolving reactions to their ...

  11. Growing up in Open Adoption: Young Adults' Perspectives

    Abstract. Most adoption agencies today allow a child's biological and adoptive families to know one another and maintain contact. This move toward openness instead of secrecy presents opportunities and challenges. The study reported here explores young adult adoptees' reactions to growing up in open adoptions.

  12. Open vs. Closed Adoptions: A Post Adoption Mental Health Perspective

    Research on the Lifelong Impact of Open Adoption The Donaldson Institute published a study in 2012 entitled "Openness in Adoption: From Secrecy and Stigma to Knowledge and Connections." The authors estimate that in 2012, only about 5% of domestic adoptions were closed adoptions.

  13. Open Adoption: Research Finds No Confusion for Adopted Kids

    Open Adoption: Research Finds No Confusion for Adopted Kids. When Adoption Connection opened its doors over 30 years ago, open adoption was starting to blossom, but still in its infancy. As one of the first adoption agencies focused on open adoption, we found ourselves working to correct three common misperceptions, many of which are still ...

  14. Open adoption

    Open adoption is a form of adoption in which the biological and adoptive families have access to varying degrees of each other's personal information and have an option of contact. While open adoption is a relatively new phenomenon in the west, it has been a traditional practice in many Asian societies, especially in South Asia, for many ...

  15. Literature Review of the Impact of Open Adoption on the Adoptee

    Impact of Openness in Adoption on Adoptees. This is a critical literature review of the empirical research about the impact of openness in adoption on adoptees placed in voluntary adoptions as infants. The most recent comprehensive literature review on this topic completed in 2001, covered research from 1990 to 1999 (Haugaard, Moed & West).

  16. The Differences Between Open Adoption And Closed Adoption

    1. Five percent of adoptions are closed. While closed adoptions can be helpful for maintaining a birth family's privacy, this study shows only five percent of US domestic infant adoptions are closed. The remaining 95 percent have some level of openness between birth families and adoptive families. 2.

  17. Research on Open Adoption

    Research on open adoption is not new. The most thorough studies were conducted in the 1980s and '90s. These were longitudinal studies that had amazing, almost identical results. A longitudinal study is a type of research that observes the same data in a repeated fashion. In these cases, adoptive parents were asked to respond to researchers ...

  18. Adoption Research

    Adoption Research. We provide accurate, reliable, and up-to-date reports that inform and. equip professionals, policymakers, and the public at large to improve. and strengthen adoption. In 2021, we conducted the largest survey ever of adoptive parents. NCFA explored the profile of adoptive parents, their experiences, and what has changed in ...

  19. Open vs. Closed Adoption: What is the Difference?

    Research has shown that maintaining an open relationship with your child's birth family can be one of the best experiences in an adoption — not only for the birth family, but also for you and, most importantly, your child. ... know and have available at that time. With an open adoption, you can continue to receive updated, potentially life ...

  20. 6 Open Adoption Facts That Will Surprise You

    1. Open Adoption Strengthens the Parent-Child Relationship. Research shows open adoption may strengthen family relationships. In this study, parents say maintaining an open adoption enhanced the parent-child relationship while also helping the child understand different roles of their birth and adoptive families. Source: Siegel, D. H. (2013).

  21. (PDF) Review: Adoption research: Trends, topics, outcomes

    contextual factors and processes underlying variability in adopted children's adjustment. Suggestions for future areas of empirical. investigation are offered, with an emphasis on the need to ...

  22. What's Open and Closed Adoption? Their Pros, Cons, and More

    A closed adoption is when the child, the family that adopts the child, or the adoptive family, has no contact with the biological or birth parents of the child. The adoptive parents get little or ...

  23. Open Adoption Research Paper

    The empirical evidence from studies and research indicates that open adoption contributes to improved psychological well-being for adoptees, as they tend to exhibit higher self-esteem, lower identity confusion, and reduced rates of mental health issues compared to those in closed adoptions (Grotevant and McRoy 1998; Berge et al. 2006).

  24. Adoption.

    Adoption as a means of creating or expanding a family has undergone some remarkable changes in the past half century, resulting in considerable diversity in the constellation and dynamics of adoptive family life. These changes have been fueled by several societal forces including new adoption laws and regulations, research findings from emerging developmental science, and advocacy efforts by ...

  25. Migration and discrimination: exploring the pathways of a more

    For example, 'nationality' or 'national origin' are included alongside other legally protected traits, and in principle, the list of legally protected traits remains open. Footnote 4 Oddly enough, this requirement coexists comfortably with the stark inequality induced by changes in global migration governance.

  26. Knowledge mapping and evolution of research on older adults ...

    Cluster #1—Research on the factors influencing technology adoption among older adults is a prominent topic, covering age, gender, self-efficacy, attitude, and and intention to use (Berkowsky et ...

  27. SEC.gov

    Too Short to Report: Statement on Adoption of Form N-PORT and Form N-CEN Reporting; Guidance on Open-End Fund Liquidity Risk Management Programs Commissioner Hester M. Peirce August 28, 2024