Support Grows for Youth Who 'Age Out'
Transition From Foster Care to Adulthood Eased
Statistics reveal startling facts about this vulnerable group
of young people.
By Paul R. Pace, News Staff
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| Illustration: John Michael
Yanson |
Most people understand that foster care is a way to help children
whose parents are, for various reasons, incapable of raising them.
But not as widely known is that some of these young people eventually
"age out" of the foster care system that was set up
to help them. For many in this situation, their 18th birthdays
signify not an exciting step into adulthood, but a fearful journey
into the unknown.
Statistics reveal startling facts about this vulnerable group
of young people, who number about 100,000 a year. Two years after
being discharged from foster care, up to 45 percent of them will
experience homelessness, half will be unemployed, and fewer than
half will have a high school diploma. Those who have aged out
of foster care are three times more likely than the general population
to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.
Positive changes are taking place, however. In the past several
years, some states have passed laws that raise the foster care
emancipation age from 18 to 21. Also, there are programs specializing
in assisting youth who have aged out.
Elizabeth Brown is a licensed clinical social worker who has
spent years working in administration for at-risk youth in South
Florida and Los Angeles. While at the Los Angeles Department of
Children and Family Services, she supervised the care of more
than 100 foster youth.
Brown noted that while she worked in Los Angeles, around 1,000
youth a year aged out of the foster care system. Luckily, there
were programs in place to help. But Brown found that was not the
case everywhere.
When she moved back to her hometown of Palm Beach County, Fla.,
she discovered there were 50 to 70 young people there who age
out of the foster care system per year with no help in starting
life on their own.
"If these kids were growing up in the foster system, on
average, they've been staying at from five to 10 different homes
— and then they're alone at 18," Brown said. "It disturbed
me from a public policy point of view. I wanted to create a program
that addressed that."
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From May 2007 NASW News. © 2007 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of
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