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Use of population measures and norms to identify resilient outcomes in young people in care: an exploratory study
Authors:Robert J Flynn  Hayat Ghazal†  Louise Legault‡  Gail Vandermeulen§  Susan Petrick§
Affiliation:School of Psychology &Centre for Research on Community Services, University of Ottawa,; Services for Children and Adults of Prescott-Russell &Centre for Research on Community Services, University of Ottawa,; Child Welfare League of Canada &Centre for Research on Community Services, University of Ottawa, and; Ontario Association of Children's Aid Societies, Canada
Abstract:The purposes of this study were to derive a new method for identifying resilience (i.e. positive adaptation in spite of serious adversity) among young people in care and to determine the percentage of the latter who experienced resilience on selected outcomes, as conceptualized from within the developmental approach of Looking After Children. The participants comprised two samples of young people who were living in out‐of‐home care (mainly foster care) in the province of Ontario, Canada, 340 aged 10–15 years and 132 aged 5–9 years. Virtually all had experienced severe adversity in their families of origin, such that in most cases the legal custody, care, and control of the young people had been permanently transferred from their parents to a local Children's Aid Society. Corresponding to each in‐care sample was a general‐population sample of the same age range that served as a normative comparison group and was drawn from the National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (NLSCY). The NLSCY is an ongoing, long‐term social‐policy study of the development of a nationally representative sample of Canadian children into adolescence and early adulthood. The general‐population samples were composed, respectively, of 5539 young people aged 10–15 years and 11 858 children aged 5–9 years. Resilience among the young people in care was operationally defined, on each outcome variable, as average or above‐average functioning relative to that of the general‐population sample of the same age range. The percentage experiencing resilience was relatively high on the outcomes of health, self‐esteem, and pro‐social behaviour, moderate on the outcomes of relationship with friends and anxiety and emotional distress, and low on the outcome of academic performance. The implications of the findings are discussed.
Keywords:adversity  children in care  foster care  Looking After Children  resilience  risk
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