Anonymous wrote:So many abused animals need a loving home too. Consider rescuing a pet instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another consideration is that an older child may continue to have a relationship with their biological family, who bring in a whole host of other problems.
If the bio family members have criminal, drug, mental health problems, how are you prepared to handle them coming to your home to visit the kid and their influence over them?
I would say you should probably expect this to happen. Adopting a teen is by definition an open adoption. You can’t cut them off from everything that happened before.
Another thing to consider is finances. Therapy is not covered by in-network insurance usually, and once you adopt, it’s your financial responsibility. As is getting the kid to and from therapy, going to IEP meetings, talking to the school, taking kid to school placement …
Ok, this part is probably inaccurate. Nearly every teen adopted from foster care is going to qualify for ongoing assistance, which generally includes Medicaid and a monthly stipend. https://nacac.org/help/adoption-assistance/ has information by state. But I agree with the rest. Again, not a reason to avoid it. But by adopting a teen you are getting involved not just with a kid but a whole family. It's like getting married and having in-laws. It can be great, or not. There might be relatives who are supportive and helpful but just can't parent a kid, and ones who are harmful. And who is who might change over time.
The stipend is quickly eaten up in a couple therapy appts leaving a lack of coverage for the remaining appts. And if in patient care is needed - even the best insurance doesn’t provide much coverage.
What are you talking about? You can put a foster child on your insurance if you get a court order and child comes with medicaid. When adopted, they'd constitute to get the medicaid and an adoption subsidy. There are no co-pays or deductibles. While in foster care before adoption, anything not covered child welfare pays for (i.e. neuropsych)
what I mean is that you have no idea what you are talking about as you make it sound like benefits are bottomless, copays are nothing, and therapists are lining up and have plenty of availability. And you totally ignored residential care. Insurance covers a tiny portion of at all and medicaid is not much better. Oh and that will only matter if you can find a placeZ
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another consideration is that an older child may continue to have a relationship with their biological family, who bring in a whole host of other problems.
If the bio family members have criminal, drug, mental health problems, how are you prepared to handle them coming to your home to visit the kid and their influence over them?
I would say you should probably expect this to happen. Adopting a teen is by definition an open adoption. You can’t cut them off from everything that happened before.
Another thing to consider is finances. Therapy is not covered by in-network insurance usually, and once you adopt, it’s your financial responsibility. As is getting the kid to and from therapy, going to IEP meetings, talking to the school, taking kid to school placement …
Ok, this part is probably inaccurate. Nearly every teen adopted from foster care is going to qualify for ongoing assistance, which generally includes Medicaid and a monthly stipend. https://nacac.org/help/adoption-assistance/ has information by state. But I agree with the rest. Again, not a reason to avoid it. But by adopting a teen you are getting involved not just with a kid but a whole family. It's like getting married and having in-laws. It can be great, or not. There might be relatives who are supportive and helpful but just can't parent a kid, and ones who are harmful. And who is who might change over time.
The stipend is quickly eaten up in a couple therapy appts leaving a lack of coverage for the remaining appts. And if in patient care is needed - even the best insurance doesn’t provide much coverage.
What are you talking about? You can put a foster child on your insurance if you get a court order and child comes with medicaid. When adopted, they'd constitute to get the medicaid and an adoption subsidy. There are no co-pays or deductibles. While in foster care before adoption, anything not covered child welfare pays for (i.e. neuropsych)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another consideration is that an older child may continue to have a relationship with their biological family, who bring in a whole host of other problems.
If the bio family members have criminal, drug, mental health problems, how are you prepared to handle them coming to your home to visit the kid and their influence over them?
I would say you should probably expect this to happen. Adopting a teen is by definition an open adoption. You can’t cut them off from everything that happened before.
Another thing to consider is finances. Therapy is not covered by in-network insurance usually, and once you adopt, it’s your financial responsibility. As is getting the kid to and from therapy, going to IEP meetings, talking to the school, taking kid to school placement …
Ok, this part is probably inaccurate. Nearly every teen adopted from foster care is going to qualify for ongoing assistance, which generally includes Medicaid and a monthly stipend. https://nacac.org/help/adoption-assistance/ has information by state. But I agree with the rest. Again, not a reason to avoid it. But by adopting a teen you are getting involved not just with a kid but a whole family. It's like getting married and having in-laws. It can be great, or not. There might be relatives who are supportive and helpful but just can't parent a kid, and ones who are harmful. And who is who might change over time.
The stipend is quickly eaten up in a couple therapy appts leaving a lack of coverage for the remaining appts. And if in patient care is needed - even the best insurance doesn’t provide much coverage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely not since you have three bio kids. Focus on your three bio kids for now. Do not screw up their lives like this.
I agree with this (hopefully with more empathy than PP). My kids are very young but I understand the adolescent years are busy and fraught with challenges. I think both your bio kids and your potential adoptive kid(s) will be better off if you wait for your youngest to fly the coop, and would only require you to wait a few more years.
You’re a good person OP.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t until all my kids were launched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another consideration is that an older child may continue to have a relationship with their biological family, who bring in a whole host of other problems.
If the bio family members have criminal, drug, mental health problems, how are you prepared to handle them coming to your home to visit the kid and their influence over them?
I would say you should probably expect this to happen. Adopting a teen is by definition an open adoption. You can’t cut them off from everything that happened before.
Another thing to consider is finances. Therapy is not covered by in-network insurance usually, and once you adopt, it’s your financial responsibility. As is getting the kid to and from therapy, going to IEP meetings, talking to the school, taking kid to school placement …
Ok, this part is probably inaccurate. Nearly every teen adopted from foster care is going to qualify for ongoing assistance, which generally includes Medicaid and a monthly stipend. https://nacac.org/help/adoption-assistance/ has information by state. But I agree with the rest. Again, not a reason to avoid it. But by adopting a teen you are getting involved not just with a kid but a whole family. It's like getting married and having in-laws. It can be great, or not. There might be relatives who are supportive and helpful but just can't parent a kid, and ones who are harmful. And who is who might change over time.
Anonymous wrote:Calling someone a do gooder for wanting to do this is just plain rude.
The term white savior is rude too. We are white with an adopted black child, now a tween, who we love as our own. Heard that word get thrown around too.
OP go for it, we have a friend fostering a 12yo because they have 2 slightly older boys and felt they could handle it. He is thriving with them. The end goal is obviously reunification but while he’s with them he’s doing really well.