Literature DB >> 33584465

Vulnerability and Well-Being Decades After Leaving Care.

Thomas Gabriel1, Samuel Keller1, Clara Bombach2.   

Abstract

One of the most important goals of out of home placements is to reduce vulnerability and to enable well-being in the long term. This article hermeneutically reconstructs biographies decades after leaving-care to understand the impact of residential care experiences on selected dimensions of care-leavers' well-being, that were discovered in the data material. For this article three analytic areas were selected from the core of the narratives of former care leavers: Social networks, parenthood and state interventions. The selected findings on long-term outcomes presented here are based on a qualitative research project funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation on life trajectories after residential care (1950-1990). The authors have conducted 37 biographical narrative interviews with former children placed in residential care between 1950 and 1990 in the Canton of Zurich, Switzerland. The analysis of these narrative interviews was structured by the inductive procedures of Grounded Theory. Its foundation is the conceptualisation and dimensionalisation of data through inductive coding within the narratives. Research question: We mainly were interested in aspects of transitions exclusively relevant from the actors' point of view. The objective of this paper is to learn for the future by taking biographical experiences and long-term outcome in account. As we know residential care facilities have changed in last decades, but structurally some key figures are still continuing. They still interrupt the life course two times: when you start to the live in the institution and when you leave. One main question is how young people manage to integrate residential experiences through their life course and where they keep on struggling until the end of their lives. From a life-course perspective, the impact of social service intention on individual life courses, behind sending the individuals to such facilities, are important to investigate. They implicate relevant information concerning current practice and impact of placing children in residential care. Social networks and experiences of parenthood show why we must frame and accompany transitions out of care.
Copyright © 2021 Gabriel, Keller and Bombach.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Child Care Research; life-course perspective; long-term outcome; residential care; vulnerability; well-being

Year:  2021        PMID: 33584465      PMCID: PMC7873352          DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.577450

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Psychol        ISSN: 1664-1078


  3 in total

1.  Foster youth transitions to adulthood: a longitudinal view of youth leaving care.

Authors:  M E Courtney; I Piliavin; A Grogan-Kaylor; A Nesmith
Journal:  Child Welfare       Date:  2001 Nov-Dec

2.  Childhood adversity, social support networks and well-being among youth aging out of care: An exploratory study of mediation.

Authors:  Eran P Melkman
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2017-08-04

Review 3.  Children and residential experiences: a comprehensive strategy for implementing a research-informed program model for residential care.

Authors:  Martha J Holden; Charles Izzo; Michael Nunno; Elliott G Smith; Thomas Endres; Jack C Holden; Frank Kuhn
Journal:  Child Welfare       Date:  2010
  3 in total

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