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Professional and Provider Perspectives on Family Involvement in Therapeutic Foster Care

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Abstract

Therapeutic foster care (TFC) offers a promising community-based treatment option for children with serious emotional and behavioral disorders in the child welfare system. Family involvement is believed to contribute to achieving the goal of family reunification in TFC, but there has been little attention to family involvement in TFC. I present findings of a qualitative study of child welfare professionals' and TFC providers' perspectives on family involvement. Respondents' views of parent-child contact, parent-professional communication and information sharing, and family involvement in decision making were examined. Values and attitudes toward family involvement, practices related to family involvement, barriers to involvement, and strategies to promote involvement emerged as themes. Professionals in this study believed in the value of family involvement, but there were challenges at the organizational level and related to some TFC providers' lack of training to work with families.

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Correspondence to Pauline Jivanjee.

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Jivanjee, P. Professional and Provider Perspectives on Family Involvement in Therapeutic Foster Care. Journal of Child and Family Studies 8, 329–341 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1022019413822

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